You look into it.
maintain distance between your eye and and eye piece of the microscope it helps
It looks foggy :)
The eyepiece is the part of a microscope or telescope that you look through to see the magnified image of your specimen. It contains lenses that magnify and focus the image for your eye to see clearly.
If you mean what you see when you look through a microscope, it is called the field of view. Until you place your eye closer to the eye piece is does appear like a white circle.
Assuming you are asking about a microscope (your question is very unclear on the subject), then the body or barrel of the microscope would do this, it would also be the point at which focus movement would be achieved.
it look the objects trough it..
Eye piece and . . .lens ;-)
maintain distance between your eye and and eye piece of the microscope it helps
to revolve microscope
It looks foggy :)
it hold the eye piece in place
an eye piece lens
The magnification power of the eye piece on a light microscope is usually 10x but it can vary for each microscope
One can calculate the total magnification of a microscope by multiplying the magnification of the eye piece by the magnification of the main scope. For a compound microscope one must multiply each eye piece magnification.
Yes, the nosepiece of a microscope is also referred to as the "nose turret" or "revolving nosepiece".
The eye-piece multiplied by the power of the lens Eye-piece: 10 lens : 50 500x magnification
It is the part that holds the objective lenses in position and at a correct distance with the eye piece