No
No, the endoplasmic reticulum is too small to be seen at 400x magnification. It is a cellular organelle that is only visible under higher magnifications, typically around 1000x or more using an electron microscope.
The magnification needed to see cells clearly under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.
To observe blood cells under a microscope, a magnification level of at least 400x is typically required.
The magnification required to clearly observe blood cells under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.
The total magnification of the microscope when using the 40x objective depends on the strength of the eye piece lens. Typically a 10x eye piece lens is used in college microscopes this would give 40x10 = 400x magnification.
No, the endoplasmic reticulum is too small to be seen at 400x magnification. It is a cellular organelle that is only visible under higher magnifications, typically around 1000x or more using an electron microscope.
At 400X total magnification, we were only able to view one cell at a time, due to the fact that the cells were separated from each other. The organelles that were visible in this type of cell were the nucleus, the cytoplasm and the cell membrane.
Cell organelles such as ribosomes, small vesicles, and some components of the cytoskeleton are not visible with a 400x microscope. These structures are smaller than the resolution limit of light microscopes at that magnification.
The magnification needed to see cells clearly under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.
To observe blood cells under a microscope, a magnification level of at least 400x is typically required.
The magnification required to clearly observe blood cells under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.
The total magnification of the microscope when using the 40x objective depends on the strength of the eye piece lens. Typically a 10x eye piece lens is used in college microscopes this would give 40x10 = 400x magnification.
To find the new field of view at 400X magnification, you would divide the original field of view by the magnification increase factor (which is 10 in this case since you are going from 40X to 400X). So, 6000 um / 10 = 600 um. Therefore, the field of view at 400X magnification would be 600 micrometers.
A magnification of at least 400x is typically needed to see protists clearly under a microscope. This level of magnification allows you to observe the details of their structure and movement.
The total magnification of a light microscope with a 40x objective lens is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece lens. Assuming a standard eyepiece magnification of 10x, the total magnification would be 400x (40x objective lens * 10x eyepiece lens = 400x total magnification).
multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the high objective lens. for example, if the eyepiece magnifies x10, and the high objective magnifies x40, then the total magnification would be 400x
One can obtain a total magnification of 400x while using an objective lens of 40x. Such a lens should be used along an eyepiece of 10x.