it is 50 on my microscope.............................
100X
low power
low power
The oil immersion lens or objective has power 90X-100X and an eyepiece lens generally in light microscope comes with 10X so total magnification of oil immersion lens is 100X10 = 1,000
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.
Yes. 4x - low power magnification is best for scanning objects under a microscope. Why? I honestly don't know but will guess; medium and high power are based off the setting of low power - you don't use coarse adjustment knob for medium and high only fine detail because the coarse is already adjusteded from low.
the view will be brighter under low power magnification...
If he/she was looking at something like a plant cell he would use the smaller lens because they would be much larger then something like a cheek cell which would need the medium or large magnification
400x
it is 50 on my 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.
The oil immersion lens or objective has power 90X-100X and an eyepiece lens generally in light microscope comes with 10X so total magnification of oil immersion lens is 100X10 = 1,000
its is good and magnifies mediumly
the magnification power of a microscope
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.
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.
Yes. 4x - low power magnification is best for scanning objects under a microscope. Why? I honestly don't know but will guess; medium and high power are based off the setting of low power - you don't use coarse adjustment knob for medium and high only fine detail because the coarse is already adjusteded from low.
On a the microscope I use, the ocular (eyepiece) has a magnification power of 10x. The 'low' (or 'scanning') objective lens is 4x, the 'medium' has a power of 10x, and the 'high' has a power of 40x. Multiply the ocular by the lens you're using to get your 'total magnification.' TIP: Only use the coarse adjustment knob while on 'low' power, then use the fine adjustment. Why? If you use the coarse adjustment knob on 'medium' or 'high,' there's a good chance you'll crack your slide. -BugCrunch
Magnification = Size drawn / Actual size
the view will be brighter under low power magnification...