The total magnification is 60.
Total magnification is determined by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. This formula is used to calculate the overall magnification of an image when viewed through a microscope.
To calculate the total magnification of a microscope, you multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens in use. For the 10x objective, the total magnification would be 8x (eyepiece) * 10x (objective) = 80x. For the 40x objective, the total magnification would be 8x (eyepiece) * 40x (objective) = 320x.
The total magnification would be 500x...you take the ocular and multiply it by whatever objective you are using.
What is the value of the smallest objective?If it is 4x,The total magnification = eye piece x objective lens= (10x) x (4x)= 40x
MP=(d/L)*(1-(L-l)f) where d would be the distance from the eye to the image without a lens L is the distance from the eye to the new virtual image (with a lens) l is the distance from the eye to the lens this equation only covers a single lens (whereas there tend to be two in a microscope), but that's no worry; use it twice! (i.e treat both lenses as independent sources of the image)
Total magnification is determined by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. This formula is used to calculate the overall magnification of an image when viewed through a microscope.
To calculate the total magnification of a microscope, you multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens in use. For the 10x objective, the total magnification would be 8x (eyepiece) * 10x (objective) = 80x. For the 40x objective, the total magnification would be 8x (eyepiece) * 40x (objective) = 320x.
Each objective lens has a different magnification. Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens to produce total magnification. For example, a 10X ocular lens and a 40X objective lens will produce a total magnification of 400X (10 x 40 = 400).
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.
The total magnification would be 500x...you take the ocular and multiply it by whatever objective you are using.
What is the value of the smallest objective?If it is 4x,The total magnification = eye piece x objective lens= (10x) x (4x)= 40x
One can calculate the total magnification of a microscope by multiplying the magnification of the eye piece by the magnification of the main scope. For a compound microscope one must multiply each eye piece magnification.
Total magnification is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece lens. For example, if the objective lens has a magnification of 40x and the eyepiece lens has a magnification of 10x, the total magnification would be 40x * 10x = 400x.
The product of the two magnifications yields the total magnification. Thus M = m X n = 5 X 10 = 50 times magnified.
10 times 65. Or 650.
The ocular lens are 10x magnification. Objective lens are 4x, 10x, 40x, 100x magnification. So once an objective lens is selected, the total magnification would be given by its product with the 10x magnification of the ocular lens. For example, if objective lens selected is 40x, total magnification would be: (10x)(40x)=400x total.
if it is 175mm objective,simply multiply u r magnification factor(.4,.....2.4)*eye piece magnifiaction(12.5).......for 2.4,the magnification will be around 30(12.5*2.4).the actula formula is Fbinocular*Meye*zoom factor/Fobj