It would look upside down.
If it is being viewed through a microscope - as the classification of the question would indicate - then the image moves to the left.
When an image is viewed through a microscope it is inverted, meaning turned upside down and it is also shown mirror image, meaning from left to right.
It is specially set up to produced a magnified image of an object placed before its objective lens.
they appear back wards
It is inverted .
Objects viewed through a light microscope look a lot bigger.
They all have a nucleus when viewed under a microscope
a slide
A light microscope creates a magnified image through a series of lenses. The light rays reflected from the viewed abject, pass through these many lenses and form an enlarged picture of the object. It is able to show the fine details of the object that most people are studying or looking for.
EYEPEICE...THE LENS AT THE EYE END OF A MICROSCOPE BY WHICH THE IMAGE IS VIEWED...THIS is answered by: Sweet Cupcake 13:))))
No, clarity of an image is resolution.
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.