it will stay the same!!
It will get smaller.
Well it gets smaller.
It becomes smaller.
It becomes smaller .
increase
The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
Going to high power on a microscope decreases the area of the field of view. The field of view is inversely proportional to the magnification of the objective lens. ... The specimen appears larger with a higher magnification because a smaller area of the object is spread out to cover the field of view of your eye
when you change from low power to high power the light intensity decreases. this is because the high power objective lens is smaller than the low power lens. therefore, the high power lens lets less light through
If magnification increases ONLY, then resolving power does not increase. However, if the magnification increased while staying in focus (upgrading resolution and magnification with objective lense), shorter wavelengths are needed to stay in focus with increased magnification to yield the same high resolution as with previous objective lense, so this case, resolving power does increase.
magnification, i have the same stupid puzzle, get the answers online by typing microscope mania review into google, and hitting one that says answer key.
The field of view is inversely related to the magnification power...the greater the magnification, the smaller the field of view
The diameter of a field is decreased by 1.5 millimeters when changed from low power to high power magnification.
It doesn't change the area of the slide. What it changes is the area in the field of view.
the view will be brighter under low power magnification...
The visibility of the specimen decreases as the power of magnification increases on a microscope. The specimen area will shrink as the magnification is increased.
Going to high power on a microscope decreases the area of the field of view. The field of view is inversely proportional to the magnification of the objective lens. ... The specimen appears larger with a higher magnification because a smaller area of the object is spread out to cover the field of view of your eye
field-of-review
No, you can change the magnification of the telescope by simply changing the eyepiece. The two most important powers of the telescope, light-gathering power and resolving power, depend on the diameter of the telescope, but it does not control the magnification.
the magnification power of a microscope
low-power magnificatin = (10x)(4x) = 40x high-power magnification = (10x)(40x) = 400x It depends on what magnification you are looking for; high-power magnification OR low-power magnification.
it is increased 10 times
It is the area that you see when looking through the microscope. The field of view depends on the strength of magnification. The lower the power the larger the field of view.