Want this question answered?
Whether the object is moving from left to right across the field of view, or from right to left.
The reason it is more difficult is that the 'field of view' is much smaller, the higher the objective power. In other words, you don't have to be so exactly 'on target' with a lower objective power, as the field of view is larger in proportion to the object being viewed, so the object can be farther off to one side or the other, and still be seen. Once found in the lower power field, center the object in the field and then switch to the higher power- the object should then be in the higher power field of view. This is true for microscopes and telescopes, as well as any instrument that magnifies at different powers of magnification.
A telescope.
to found the front view it to draw the part you see first and how to found the side view is to imagine you are turning the object around and the top view it to imagine that you a looking at the top of a cereal box or whatever object it is and say you are in the sky looking down on it
Vigilance mirror is made of convex mirror because convex mirror shows large field of view. ... Image formed in the convex mirror is small in the size and closer. So we can see clear image.
If the entire field of view is 32 mm and the object occupies 25% of that then you will multiply 32 by 0.25. The result is 8 mm.
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
At a higher power the field of view is smaller and the object may no longer be in the field of view. Or it may have gone out of focus.
a place where the background of the object is called field in microscope
yes!
You can use that to estimate the size of objects that you are observing.
There is a relationship between the power of an objective lens and its field of view. As the power of the objective lens increases, the size of its field of view decreases
320mm
It has to be of sufficient size and luminosity to be visible through a telescope.
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT THAT THE IMAGE IS CENTERED IN THE FIELD OF VIEW BEFORE SWITCHING TO A HIGHER POWER
yes,it does