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As the magnification increases, the depth of field decreases.
The field of vision shrinks as the magnification gets higher so as the magnification increases the less of the diameter of the microscopic field you can see.
No; increasing the number of loops in a solenoid will cause the strength of its magnetic field to increase.
as you zoom in the view gets bigger and if its not in the middle you wont be able to see it properly .
When a microscope is parcentered, the specimens will appear centered in the field of view at every magnification. So if a field of a slide is centered at the lowest power, even though the field diameter shrinks at each higher magnification, the desired part of the specimen will remain in the center of the viewing field.
The depth of field decreases.
Magnification is related because as magnification increases, the depth of field decreases.
The increase in magnification cause a decrease in the field of view.
The increase in magnification cause a decrease in the field of view.
As the magnification increases, the depth of field decreases.
The higher the magnification the lower the depth of field.
Do the following factors increase or decrease as one moves to higher magnifications with the microscope? Resolution, working distance, amount of light needed, and depth of field
it will increase the magnification of the image of specimen
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
As you increase the magnification, the field of view decreases.
Field of view will decrease as the aperture remain same but things become larger and so we can see smaller area after magnification
100x the higher the magnification the shorter the working distance