hypotenid
the magnification power of a microscope
The eyepiece lens of a compound microscope acts essentially a low power (x10 or so) magnifier of the real image created by the objective lens.
The magnification of the microscope
magnification of the eyepiece X magnification of the lens (depends on which one you choose)
The magnification of the objective lens is 10x. The magnification of the scanning lens is 4x. Therefore if you are viewing an object under scanning power, the total magnification is 40x.
it is 50 on my microscope.............................
Total magnification will be ocular magnification multipled by the objective magnification i.e. 10 x 25 = 250x.AnswerThe last time I checked if the eyepiece is on Low Power that means it is 10x. You must multiply the additional 20x, so the total magnification is 200x.
the magnification power of a microscope
The standard microscope is that the eyepiece is 10x magnification, and three types of powered magnification helps it magnify even more. Low power is 4x, Medium power is 10x, and High power is 40x. Eyepiece and Low power is 40x, Eyepiece and Medium power is 100x, and Eyepiece and High power is 400x magnification in revolance to the naked eye.
It means you have a good microscope.
The power of a light microscope can be determined by multiplying the magnification power of the eyepiece by the magnification power of the current lens. Ex. (10x) by (40x) results in in a 400x magnification.
you multyply the low powered objective and the high powered objective :)
The Dissecting Light Microscope range of magnification is 20x to 80x. The Compound Light Microscope ranges from 40x to 1000x -40x Scanning -100x Low Power -400x High Power -1000x Oil Immersion
Depends on your microscope. We've got one that's a x2.
The eyepiece lens of a compound microscope acts essentially a low power (x10 or so) magnifier of the real image created by the objective lens.
Multiply the magnification or power of the objective lens times the power of the eyepiece and it equals the total magnification
The magnification of the microscope