When you move the slide of the microscope to the right, any object on the slide as well as the slide itself will appear to move to the left. In a microscope, the image is actually inverted sideways and upside down. Like a double reflection.
A microscope inverts and transposes an image. A move left will therefore appear to move right through the eyepiece.
When viewed through a microscope, things appear to move in the opposite direction than they are really moving. If you move an object to the right, it appears to move left. The lenses of the microscope reverse the image.
right
objects appear to move the opposite. like if the actual direction is left, the apparent direction would be right, and so on. ---Nicole<3333
It is seen in the opposite direction in which you moved it. I did this experiment last Friday.
A microscope inverts and transposes an image. A move left will therefore appear to move right through the eyepiece.
When viewed through a microscope, things appear to move in the opposite direction than they are really moving. If you move an object to the right, it appears to move left. The lenses of the microscope reverse the image.
right
objects appear to move the opposite. like if the actual direction is left, the apparent direction would be right, and so on. ---Nicole<3333
they will move to the left or right depending on the microscope- some have mirriors in them so it would move right and some don't so it would move left.
It is seen in the opposite direction in which you moved it. I did this experiment last Friday.
Right
right
go right on to the computer. jump up and read the letter.
The same direction because it's only when the slide is moved left to right that it looks different... [I think]
If it is being viewed through a microscope - as the classification of the question would indicate - then the image moves to the left.
The specimen will appear to move to the right when you move the slide to the left. The opposite is true as well.