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Magnification is an enlargement of the specimen which looks bigger as the magnification increases. Resolution is the the smallest increment available. The difference between these can be explained with the example of a ruler that has 1/8" markings. Magnification will make the separation of the markings look bigger, but the resolution of the ruler doesn't change, the markings are still 1/8" apart. However, magnification can improve the resolution because you can now see things bigger. For example the separation between the markings of the ruler could be divided down even more under magnification.
The word "enlarged" can mean made bigger, or just made to look bigger (as with a magnifying glass. Small things can also be expanded, increased, amplified, magnified, or inflated.
Because they are closer to your line of vision. . . imagine you are 10 meters away from an object. imagine you have these lines coming out of your eyes , and one of the lines touches the top edge of the object , and another line touches the bottom edge of the object. now imagine the object is 5 meters closer to you. the distance between the top edge and the bottom edge is greater because you are closer to the object. .. OK to make this simpler , -- your eye is like the top of a tweezers. you put a pen(object) between the tweezers. as you move the pen closer to the top of the tweezers , the two prongs widen, making a bigger distance, and from your viewing point at the top of the tweezers the object appears bigger.
You start with the lowest magnification. Once you have found the specimen and focused it, you can move it to the next higher magnification. It should still be in focus, although you might need to use the fine adjustment.
Convex lens make objects look bigger, Concave makes it smaller and farther away
It is a way of saying how much bigger the object appears. If you look at your thumb through a lens with an ocular magnification of 20x, your thumb will look twenty times bigger.
magnification:-magnification is increase in the size of an object resolution:-resolution is power of a microscope to distinguish between two objects.Higher the resolution easier it will be to see between the two pints
The magnification of the lens.
The magnification indicates how much bigger something will be seen. For example, with the naked eye, the Moon has an angular diameter of half a degree; with a 40x magnification, it will look like it has 20 degrees.
Magnification is an enlargement of the specimen which looks bigger as the magnification increases. Resolution is the the smallest increment available. The difference between these can be explained with the example of a ruler that has 1/8" markings. Magnification will make the separation of the markings look bigger, but the resolution of the ruler doesn't change, the markings are still 1/8" apart. However, magnification can improve the resolution because you can now see things bigger. For example the separation between the markings of the ruler could be divided down even more under magnification.
If an object remains unchanged but appears to increase in size, we might apply the term macropsia to the phenomenon. The object just "looks" bigger for whatever reason. Things that affect an individual can affect that observer's perception. Additionally, there can be circumstances changing in the visual field that may contribute to an object's appearing to get larger. The moon tends to look larger near the horizon than higher in the sky is an example.
A tool you hold against your eye to make objects look bigger
The object seems to us like we are seeing with our naked eyes and it is in front of us but it is near to objective lens which has high magnification power through which it made the size of object very big than real one.
Increasing the magnification on a light microscope will decreased the diameter of the field of view. You are essentially looking closer and closer at the objects. For example: Using your hand (thumb to fingertips), create a circle as if holding a telescope. Hold your hand-telescope up to one eye and look through it at your screen. Now, move closer to the computer screen... The size of the field you are able to see gets smaller...that's what happens with a microscope lens. As you increase the magnification, the lens gets closer to the specimen.
the eye piece magnification is 10x.
magnification in optics is only a formula to know the size of image formed . it does not mean that it is greater then the object. thangs for this uestion . my name is pardeep dahiya reading in b.sc.-2year
40X.