yo mama face
Total magnification with a low power objective lens is calculated by multiplying the magnification power of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece (ocular lens). Typically, a low power objective lens has a magnification of 10x or 4x, and when combined with a standard 10x eyepiece, the total magnification would be 100x or 40x, respectively. Therefore, total magnification for low power objectives usually ranges from 40x to 100x.
The standard microscope is that the eyepiece is 10x magnification, and three types of powered magnification helps it magnify even more. Low power is 4x, Medium power is 10x, and High power is 40x. Eyepiece and Low power is 40x, Eyepiece and Medium power is 100x, and Eyepiece and High power is 400x magnification in revolance to the naked eye.
To determine the total magnification of a microscope, you need to know the magnification power of the objective lens and the magnification power of the eyepiece (ocular lens). Total magnification is calculated by multiplying these two values together. For example, if the objective lens has a magnification of 40x and the eyepiece is 10x, the total magnification would be 400x.
the difference between the low power and high power objectives on a microscope are that the low power objective has a lesser magnification than the high power objective
Oh, dude, the magnification first used to look at a slide is typically low power, like around 4x or 10x. It's like the warm-up act before you get to the headliner high power magnification. So, you know, start low and work your way up to the good stuff.
Total magnification with a low power objective lens is calculated by multiplying the magnification power of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece (ocular lens). Typically, a low power objective lens has a magnification of 10x or 4x, and when combined with a standard 10x eyepiece, the total magnification would be 100x or 40x, respectively. Therefore, total magnification for low power objectives usually ranges from 40x to 100x.
Low power magnification is considered to be a hundred times. This is the result of multiplying the objective and optical lenses which have the power of 10.
The total magnification of a microscope when the low power objective is locked in place is the product of the magnification of the eyepiece and the magnification of the objective lens. For most microscopes, the low power objective lens has a magnification of around 10x, and the standard eyepiece magnification is 10x. Therefore, the total magnification would be 100x.
Total magnification will be ocular magnification multipled by the objective magnification i.e. 10 x 25 = 250x.AnswerThe last time I checked if the eyepiece is on Low Power that means it is 10x. You must multiply the additional 20x, so the total magnification is 200x.
Low power value not given hence can't be calculated .
The magnification of a microscope is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. In this case, if you have a 10x low power objective and a 10x high power objective, the total magnification would be 100x (10x * 10x) for both objectives when used with the same eyepiece magnification.
Depends on your microscope. We've got one that's a x2.
To calculate total magnification, you multiply the ocular lens power by the objective lens power. For low power (10X objective), the total magnification is 5X (ocular) × 10X (objective) = 50X. For high power (50X objective), it is 5X (ocular) × 50X (objective) = 250X.
The standard microscope is that the eyepiece is 10x magnification, and three types of powered magnification helps it magnify even more. Low power is 4x, Medium power is 10x, and High power is 40x. Eyepiece and Low power is 40x, Eyepiece and Medium power is 100x, and Eyepiece and High power is 400x magnification in revolance to the naked eye.
Example: 4 = Low Power 10 = Med. Power 40 = High Power 100 = Eyepiece Low Power x Eyepiece = 40x Med. Power x Eyepiece = 100x High Power x Eyepiece = 400x
it is 50 on my microscope.............................
Microscopes vary in power. You can determine total magnification by the eyepiece and the lens.