the answer is compound image
A holographic image is created by recording interference patterns formed by light waves. When a person views a holographic image, each eye receives a slightly different view just like in the real world, which creates depth perception. The brain processes these different views to interpret the holographic image as a three-dimensional object.
The magnification number is how close the image is magnified. EX: if the image is being magnified by 400x then it will be a more magnified (closer look) at the image then if it was being magnified by 100x
An autostereogram is a single-image stereogram - a two-dimensional image intended to trick people into believing a three-dimensional image is present, using the same techniques as a "magic eye" picture.
The image of an object formed on the retina of the human eye is called Image Formation. Image Formation is the natural processing of light through the eye.
It doesn't form an image on the eye but in the brain.
Oculars, also known as eyepieces, are the lenses through which the viewer looks to observe the magnified image of the specimen on a microscope. They typically provide additional magnification to the image produced by the objective lenses.
When the image reaches the eye, it is right-side up. The optics in your eye flip the image upside down in the process of absorbing the light. The up-side down image is then sent to your brain. You brain translates it back to right side up, and then creates the image for you to see. The image never appears upside down to you, because your brain does not create the image for you to see until it has flipped it back right-side up.
The retina is where the image is formed.
An inverted image with the eye refers to an image that is formed upside down on the retina of the eye. This happens because light rays coming from an object are refracted by the eye's lens and focused on the retina. The brain then processes this inverted image and interprets it as right side up.
3D glasses work by providing a separate image to each eye. The brain then combines the two images into a single image with 3D characteristics. The 3D process fools your brain into thinking it is seeing a 3D image, so it creates one for you.
eye
Light enters the top of the scope through a glass panel. It hits a mirror situated on the inside of the scope (which is in effect a long tube) The image hitting the mirror, which is angled down reflects the image to another mirror situated on the bottom of the tube. This image is reflected to the eye pieces.