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The revolving nosepiece or turret is the part of the microscope that holds the different objective lenses, allowing you to switch between them to adjust magnification.
The movable part of the microscope on which objective lenses are mounted is called the nosepiece. The nosepiece allows for easy rotation and selection of different objective lenses to adjust the magnification of the specimen being viewed.
the revolving nosepiece
The part of the microscope that holds three lenses and can be rotated is called the revolving nosepiece or turret. It allows the user to switch between different objective lenses, providing various magnifications for viewing the specimen. This feature enhances the versatility and functionality of the microscope.
The objective lenses are attached to the nosepiece of the microscope. The nosepiece is a rotating turret that holds multiple objective lenses, allowing the user to switch between different magnifications.
Conrad Beck has written: 'Photographic lenses' -- subject(s): Photographic lenses 'The microscope, part II' -- subject(s): Microscope and microscopy 'The microscope' -- subject(s): Microscope and microscopy, Microscopy, Microscopes
The body tube of a compound optical microscope contains the ocular lens, also called the eyepiece lends, and the objective lens system which consists of one or more lenses.
The main parts of the microscope are the eye-pieces, microscope tube, nose-piece, objective, mechanical stage, condenser, coarse and fine focusingknobs, and light source.
The objective lens is the part of a microscope that typically magnifies about 40x. By combining with other lenses in the system, such as the eyepiece, the overall magnification of the microscope can be further increased.
The revolving nosepiece holds the objective lenses and allows them to be rotated into place for viewing different magnifications.
eyepiece
eyepiece