An eyepiece lens takes the bright light from the focus of the objectivce lens and magnifies it :)
slide
EYEPEICE...THE LENS AT THE EYE END OF A MICROSCOPE BY WHICH THE IMAGE IS VIEWED...THIS is answered by: Sweet Cupcake 13:))))
the lens at the top that you look through.they are usually 10x or 15x power
Divide the focal length of the objective lens by the focal length of the eyepiece.
The eyepiece or ocular lens is the part of the microscope that you look through. It is located at the top of the microscope and magnifies the image of the specimen being viewed.
A microscope has an objective lens that magnifies the image of an object, which is then further enlarged by the eyepiece for viewing. This combination of lenses allows for detailed examination of small specimens.
The eyepiece in a microscope is the lens that you look through to observe the specimen on the slide. It magnifies the image created by the objective lens, which is the lens closest to the specimen. The eyepiece typically provides additional magnification to allow for detailed examination of the specimen.
its a kind of cheese.
Magnification numbers are how many times bigger an object appears than it actually is. For a basic microscope the eyepeice lens is usually x10. This means the object being shown through the lens is actually 10 times smaller than it actually is. When appearing through multiple lenses the magnification numbers are multiplied together. So, when using x40, in addition to the eyepeice the magnification is x400, or it appears 400x bigger than it actually is.
Eyepiece Lens or Ocular Lens is the lens on top. This is use to see the things or objects to observe or to study.
used to focus the image
To view the object