10X
450x TM ( magnification of the ocular lens ( 10x) multiplied by the magnification from the objective lens ( 45x)= 450x TM ( total magnification)
The total magnification is equal to the magnification of the eyepiece multiplied by the magnification of the objective lens. So in this case the objective lens would need to be 100X.
200 You find the answer by multiplying the objective and ocular together!(: I had this question on my Bio final.
70x
Calculating total magnification is pretty simple. Take the magnification of the eyepiece and multiply by the magnification of the objective. So in this case 10x x 4x = 40x.
The total magnification of a microscope is found by multiplying the ocular and objective together.
The total magnification would be 500x...you take the ocular and multiply it by whatever objective you are using.
Total magnification is calculated by objective times ocular lens. So if you increase the objective lens is directly related to an increase in magnification.
450x TM ( magnification of the ocular lens ( 10x) multiplied by the magnification from the objective lens ( 45x)= 450x TM ( total magnification)
The total magnification is equal to the magnification of the eyepiece multiplied by the magnification of the objective lens. So in this case the objective lens would need to be 100X.
magnification= ocular power *objective power=10X*60X
the power of the ocular lens multiplied by the magnification of the objective lens
200 You find the answer by multiplying the objective and ocular together!(: I had this question on my Bio final.
400x
450
10 X 10 = 100 magnification. Ocular lens = 10 Objective lens = 10
Each objective lens has a different magnification. Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens to produce total magnification. For example, a 10X ocular lens and a 40X objective lens will produce a total magnification of 400X (10 x 40 = 400).