i assume you mean what does soenthing put in viewing area of a microscope it will magnify that object
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.
Objects appear larger and more detailed in a microscope due to magnification of the image. Light passing through the object is refracted and focused by lenses in the microscope, allowing for increased resolution and visibility of fine details. Magnification and resolution together contribute to the enhanced clarity of the object's features when viewed under a microscope.
The shortest object in a microscope is called the "specimen" or the "sample." It is the object or material being observed under the microscope.
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.
A microscope lens with a power of 20X will magnify an object 20 times its actual size.
When looking through a microscope, objects appear larger because the lens system magnifies them. The microscope uses light to illuminate the object, allowing us to see intricate details that are not visible to the naked eye. Magnification and resolution of the microscope determine how clearly we can observe the object.
*A microscope magnifies because if it enlarged an object, it would make the object under the microscope physically bigger. *Magnifying just makes it appear bigger than it actually is.
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.
Objects appear larger and more detailed in a microscope due to magnification of the image. Light passing through the object is refracted and focused by lenses in the microscope, allowing for increased resolution and visibility of fine details. Magnification and resolution together contribute to the enhanced clarity of the object's features when viewed under a microscope.
an object
The shortest object in a microscope is called the "specimen" or the "sample." It is the object or material being observed under the microscope.
The object that you look at under a microscope is called a specimen. It is placed on a glass slide and then magnified and viewed through the microscope lens.
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.
A microscope can make objects appear hundreds to thousands of times bigger than they actually are, depending on the type of microscope and its magnification level used. This allows for the observation of tiny structures and details that are not visible to the naked eye.
In what directions do images move under a microscope?
bodie
A slide