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The image formed is larger than the object, right-side up, and virtual.
When needing to make something larger you will need a microscope. A microscope has two lenses; one being the objective lenses and the other is the ocular lens.
13.7 millimeters
For a convex lens the focal point is the transition point between getting a real image and a virtual image. If the object is at a greater distance then F you get a real image. If the object is closer to the lens then F you get a virtual image. If the object is located at F the light rays from the object leave the lens parallel and never form any kind of image.
You could insert a second lens in the focal path, between the object and the first lens. The second lens can be designed (or moved) to focus the image on the screen. This is the same function that eyeglasses do for people with poor vision. The second lens, the eyeglasses, are inserted between the viewed object and the lens of the eyes. The second lens is designed to correct the distortion of the eye lens, thus creating an in-focus object on the "screens" of the eyes.
The eyepiece lens acts like a magnifying glass looking at the image from the objective lens.
The eyepiece of the telescope doesn't magnify the object, but it does magnifythe real image of the object that forms at the focus of the primary lens or mirror.
10x
Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece - by the magnification of the object lens. For example - if the eyepiece is labeled 10x, and the object lense is 12x... then the total magnification is 120x
The eyepiece can also be referred to as the lens system or lens
No, the objective lens of a microscope, a telescope, or a camera is at the end nearest the object being observed - that is why it is named the objective lens.
Another name is eyepiece or eyepiece lens.
The total magnification would be 200x, since the total magnification is the magnification of the objective lens X the magnification of the eyepiece.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
No, the eyepiece and objective lens are at opposite ends of the microscope.
AnswerOcular Lens is another name for the eyepiece of a compound microscope.