To calculate the total magnification of a microscope, you multiply the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. For example, if the objective lens has a magnification of 40x and the eyepiece has a magnification of 10x, the total magnification would be 40x * 10x = 400x.
When using a 4x objective lens on a microscope, the total magnification is calculated by multiplying the objective lens magnification by the eyepiece magnification. If the eyepiece (ocular) lens is typically 10x, the total magnification would be 4x (objective) × 10x (eyepiece) = 40x. Therefore, when scanning with a 4x objective, the total magnification will be 40x.
The total magnification would be 600x. This is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the eyepiece lens (15x) by the magnification of the objective lens (40x).
It depends on what magnification the ocular lens is (usually 10x), then you multiply that by the objective lens magnification (what you said to be 40x). So the microscope would magnify your specimen by 400 times.
What is the value of the smallest objective?If it is 4x,The total magnification = eye piece x objective lens= (10x) x (4x)= 40x
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).
40x
The 40x objective lens is one of the (usually) 3 objective lenses. It magnifies the image by 40x (hence the name). However, the image you view doesn't have a magnification of 40. There is the ocular lens, which typically is 5x or 10x, in addition to the objective lens.
The total magnification is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the ocular lens. In this case, 4x (objective lens) x 10x (ocular lens) = 40x total magnification.
With a 4x objective lens compared to a 40x objective lens, you would see a larger area of the specimen, but the image would be less detailed and magnified with the 4x objective. The 40x objective would provide a much closer and higher magnification view of a smaller area of the specimen.
To calculate the total magnification of a microscope, you multiply the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. For example, if the objective lens has a magnification of 40x and the eyepiece has a magnification of 10x, the total magnification would be 40x * 10x = 400x.
When using a 4x objective lens on a microscope, the total magnification is calculated by multiplying the objective lens magnification by the eyepiece magnification. If the eyepiece (ocular) lens is typically 10x, the total magnification would be 4x (objective) × 10x (eyepiece) = 40x. Therefore, when scanning with a 4x objective, the total magnification will be 40x.
The total magnification would be 600x. This is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the eyepiece lens (15x) by the magnification of the objective lens (40x).
The magnification of a compound light microscope is determined by multiplying the magnification of the ocular lens (eyepiece) by the magnification of the objective lens. For example, if the ocular lens has a magnification of 10x and the objective lens has a magnification of 40x, the total magnification would be 10x * 40x = 400x.
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
It depends on what magnification the ocular lens is (usually 10x), then you multiply that by the objective lens magnification (what you said to be 40x). So the microscope would magnify your specimen by 400 times.
The lower power objective is the lens on the microscope that gives you the lowest magnification. The exact magnification is 40x