The answer is about 2.9mm at 80x.
With a reticle under the microscope.
100x the higher the magnification the shorter the working distance
10X
You need about 40x magnification to remotely see the rings around Saturn. If your Binoculars are 40x, you could see them.
68
it will increase the magnification of the image of specimen
With a reticle under the microscope.
400x gives the smallest field of view. The magnification of the instrument, and the field of view are inversely rational.
40x is magnified more, so if you zoom in on something, you're only seeing a part of what it was before. Versus, if you zoom out, you see more. It's not as detailed, but it's a larger field of view.
You use the 3 objective lenses of a compound microscope to switch powers. There's LOW, MEDIUM, and HIGH power. With LOW power, you can magnify what you're looking at. With HIGH power, you can see things that you can't see with a naked eye.
100x the higher the magnification the shorter the working distance
The changes in the field of view and the amount of light when going from one low to high power using the compound microscope is 40X for (LOW) And 100X for (High).
It varies based on the microscope but is usually 4.5mm at 40X (low power), 1.8mm at 100X (medium power), 0.45mm at 400X(high power), and 0.18mm at 1000X.
10X
Yes.
how do you beat level 40 in 40x escape
40x=280 x=7