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On the microscope stage (after it has been mounted on a glass microscope slide).
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A good view of the Earth.
Under the influence of gravity, every thrown object begins to accelerate downward as soon as it leaves the hand. The point of the aim must be above the target in order to compensate for the distance of fall during the object's flight time.
So we can make the world a better place
On the microscope stage (after it has been mounted on a glass microscope slide).
What you do first when you use a microscope you put the slide in. Then you focus the microscope. Then you look at the object you are supposed to or look at the object you want to.
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I'm guessing you mean the electron microscope. The EM does the same thing an ordinary visible light microscope does which is allows the viewer to see very tiny things. But the EM allows the viewer to see things that are way smaller than the smallest objects the ordinary microscope can see. The electron microscope allows us to see those way smaller objects because the electro-magnetic waves that the electron microscope uses to illuminate the target object we want to view are orders of magnitude shorter than visible light waves. And a rule of physics is that whatever object we want to see can only be seen when the illuminating waves are shorter than the object's size.
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Batering is the trade of one object of want for another object of want and/or intrest in place of money.
The lenses serve to enlarge the object you want to study. Without them, you might as well look through a toilet roll.
right click on the block in which you want to place the block
That depends on which microscope you want to use. For a compound microscope, use the following steps:Place a slide with a coverslip on the microscope's stage.Turn on the light at the microscope's base, or turn the glass disc until you get light to the microscope.Choose the objective lens that you want to use to view your object.Use the coarse adjustment to focus in LOW and MEDIUM power.If you go to HIGH power, use the fine adjustment to focus.If you hold a microscope, hold the arm with one hand and hold the base with your other hand.
A dissection microscope would allow you to see the entire insect in a magnified fashion, but a light microscope or an electron microscope would both also work fine. Ultimately it would depend on how much detail you want to see.
it depends on height of object and distance of object from the mirror
That depends on which microscope you want to use. For a compound microscope, use the following steps:Place a slide with a coverslip on the microscope's stage.Turn on the light at the microscope's base, or turn the glass disc until you get light to the microscope.Choose the objective lens that you want to use to view your object.Use the coarse adjustment to focus in LOW and MEDIUM power.If you go to HIGH power, use the fine adjustment to focus.If you hold a microscope, hold the arm with one hand and hold the base with your other hand.Read more: How_do_you_use_a_microscope