Want this question answered?
The water acts as a magnifying lens.
yes
if you are the answer the answer is: yes it can be felt
yes or no dumies it is in your book read it and you have a big butt
Gravity causes a pair of forces that attract every two objects toward each other, whether they're big, small, humongous, microscopic, mixed, or in between.
The water acts as a magnifying lens.
A big magnifying glass will burn the US, one neighborhood at a time.
Rodger Bacon Is the creator of the magnifying glass. The first magnifying glass was a big ball full of water. And it helped people read.
Two reasons: - the nucleus is stained - the magnifying power of the microscope makes small things look big
The simple answer is that; it is closer. Thanks to forced perspective, smaller objects that are closer may look as big or even bigger than bigger objects that are farther away.
magnifying the angle will do nothing to change the actual ANGLE itself, it will only make the "legs" of the angle look longer. so regardless to the magnification used, the angle will always measure the same.
The most obvious answer to me is using them to look at the Sun. You know how a magnifying glass can be used to burn paper. Well a telescope is worse. Another one is when your leg crashes into the tripod that is holding your telescope. I have a big telescope and I did this and it hurt!
None. A microscope is not need to figure out the mintmark. It is big enough to see. You can however use a magnifying glass to see other details better.
Stars are actually very-very big but when we see them from earth they seem very small because they are many light years far from us. We know that far objects look smaller.
Magnifiers sound like magnify and a magnifying glass makes stuff big so its is to make your desktop larger
A magnifying glass. Binoculars. A telescope. A miscroscope.
You are right sir