objective lense
The objective lens is the part of the microscope that helps to make an object look larger by magnifying its image.
The part of the microscope that is being viewed is the specimen or sample that is placed on the slide. This is the object that is magnified and observed under the microscope.
the stage on a microscope is where you would place the object being microscoped. you would put the object lets just say a leaf, on the flat part with lenses above
An electron microscope uses a beam of electrons to illuminate a specimen
An electron microscope uses a beam of electrons to illuminate a specimen
You place the object on the stage of the microscope when you are viewing it. The stage is the flat platform where the specimen is positioned for observation under the lens.
The objective lenses of a compound microscope are the parts that magnify the object being viewed. These lenses are located close to the specimen and provide the initial magnification before the image is further magnified by the eyepiece.
An object is seen less in the lens as a whole because it magnifies a specific part of the object.
Anything that is found on the water that was a part of a bigger object.
As in a camera, this part is usually called an iris diaphragm. It can make the aperture bigger to let in more light, or smaller to make the image sharper. The shutter in a camera is not the same thing.
The eyepiece of a microscope is used to magnify and focus the image of the specimen that is being viewed through the objective lenses. It allows the viewer to see a larger and clearer image of the specimen. The eyepiece typically provides additional magnification to the image produced by the objective lenses.
Fine focus is typically in reference to studying an object under a microscope. Fine focus means that the person operating the microscope focuses on one part of a specimen at a time.