Linear magnification is the complicated process of how light travels and reflects. In a short answer, It would be the trajectory of the light and at what time and speed it traveled, followed by what route it took.
the eyepiece lens magnification X the magnification of the objective lens.
15 * 30 = 450 ------------
To determime total magnification of a drawing you devide the dimensions of the drawing by the dimensions of the real object or specimen drawn Mathematically Magnification =Dimensions of drawing/dimensions of specimen
Simply, multiply the magnification of the ocular lens times the magnification of the objective lens you have in place.
What is the nature of linear magnification of a convex mirror
Linear magnification is the complicated process of how light travels and reflects. In a short answer, It would be the trajectory of the light and at what time and speed it traveled, followed by what route it took.
The nature of the image that a spherical mirror produces positive magnification is usually enlarged when compared to the real object.
The total magnification is the object magnification for example 4x,10x etc. times eyepiece magnification usually 10x and you get the total magnification. The objective lens magnification is the lens right above the slide usually 4x,10x etc.
To determine the magnification of the eyepiece on a microscope take the total magnification for the microscope and divide it by the total magnification of the objective lens. The answer is what the magnification is for the eyepiece.
LPO has a 10x magnification. HPO has a 40x magnification. OIO has a 100x magnification. LPO has the least magnification, and OIO has the largest.
the eyepiece lens magnification X the magnification of the objective lens.
it would be 15 times 40 which is 600 times magnification
low-power magnificatin = (10x)(4x) = 40x high-power magnification = (10x)(40x) = 400x It depends on what magnification you are looking for; high-power magnification OR low-power magnification.
15 * 30 = 450 ------------
To determime total magnification of a drawing you devide the dimensions of the drawing by the dimensions of the real object or specimen drawn Mathematically Magnification =Dimensions of drawing/dimensions of specimen
Empty Magnification