When you move the slide up, the image on the microscope appears to move down. This is because microscope slides have an inverted image orientation, meaning that moving the slide in one direction causes the image to move in the opposite direction.
In a microscope, the image moves in the opposite direction of the stage movement. If you move the stage to the right, the image appears to move to the left, and vice versa. This is due to the way light travels through the microscope lenses and prisms.
When you move the slide away from you on a microscope stage, the image on the microscope will appear to move in the opposite direction, towards you. This is due to the way the lenses in the microscope invert and magnify the image.
It is seen in the opposite direction in which you moved it. I did this experiment last Friday.
When you move the slide to the right in a microscope, the image appears to move to the left in the field of view. This is because the slide is moving in the opposite direction to the movement of the stage. It gives the impression that the image is shifting in the opposite direction.
In a compound microscope, the image moves in the opposite direction to the movement of the stage. So, if you move the stage to the right, the image will appear to move to the left, and vice versa. This is due to the optics of the microscope, where the image is flipped by the objective lens.
When you move the object under a microscope, the image of the object appears to move in the opposite direction. This is due to the way the lenses in the microscope magnify and invert the image that is being viewed. So, if you move the object to the left, the image will appear to move to the right, and vice versa.
When viewed through a microscope, things appear to move in the opposite direction than they are really moving. If you move an object to the right, it appears to move left. The lenses of the microscope reverse the image.
When the microscope moves the slide to the left, the image appears to move to the right in the field of view. This is because the movement of the slide is opposite to the movement of the image in the eyepiece due to the direction of light refraction in the microscope system.
When you move a slide up on a microscope stage, the image moves down in the field of view. This is because the light travels through the slide from bottom to top, so as you move the slide up, the image appears to move down.
they will move to the left or right depending on the microscope- some have mirriors in them so it would move right and some don't so it would move left.
The image will move upwards in the field of view when the slide is moved towards you. This is because the slide is physically closer to the objective lens, resulting in the object on the slide appearing to move in the opposite direction.