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a stereomicroscope is a microscope that produces a three-demensional image
The reason a microscope produces an inverted image is simply due to the number of lenses within it, or more specifically, the number of focal points it has. A microscope with a single lens will have a single focal point. Each focal point will invert the image once, meaning that a microscope with a single lens will produce an inverted image. If you were to add another lens to the microscope and align it the proper distance from the first lens, it would be possible to reorient the image to be right side up. As a side note, our eyes work the same way, the images coming into our eyes are inverted by our own lenses, its up to our brain to flip things right side up.
Half right! A microscope turns the image upside-down due to the way the mirrors are setup inside, but not backwards!
Dissecting Microscope
The stereoscopic microscope provides a right side up image
microscope
As it produces images which are reflected in a surface.
A scanning probe microscope can provide a three-dimensional image of atoms or molecules on the surface of an object.
electron microscope
SEM
a stereomicroscope is a microscope that produces a three-demensional image
SEM
microbiology
Scanning electron microscope (SEM)
A magnetic field focuses he electrons
penis
Its a Light Microscope! (=