Table of Contents
- 1 What happen when you switch from low power to high power?
- 2 What happens to the area of the field of view when you increase the objective magnification from 4X to 40X?
- 3 What happened to the image when you switch objectives?
- 4 What happens when you move a microscope slide to the right?
- 5 What happens to the size of the field of view when you switch from using the 10x objective lens to using the 40x objective lens?
- 6 What happens when you switch to a higher power microscope?
- 7 What happens to the working distance of a microscope?
- 8 Why does a 40x microscope look bigger?
What happen when you switch from low power to high power?
You will see more of an object on low power. The depth of focus is greatest on the lowest power objective. Each time you switch to a higher power, the depth of focus is reduced. Therefore a smaller part of the specimen is in focus at higher power.
What happens to the area of the field of view when you increase the objective magnification from 4X to 40X?
The field of view is inversely proportional to the magnification power, meaning that as the magnification increases, the field of view decreases. As such, when the magnification is increased from 4x to 40x, the field of view decreases.
What happened to the image when you switched objectives?
When you change from low power to high power on a microscope, the high-power objective lens moves directly over the specimen, and the low-power objective lens rotates away from the specimen. The image should remain in focus if the lenses are of high quality.
What happened to the image when you switch objectives?
What happens when you move a microscope slide to the right?
If you have to close one eye when looking into the microscope, it’s ok. Remember, everything is upside down and backwards. When you move the slide to the right, the image goes to the left!
What happens to the size of the field of view as you increase magnification?
In short, as magnification increases, the field of view decreases. When looking through a high power compound microscope it can be difficult to determine what you will see through the eyepieces at different magnifications.
What happens to the size of the field of view when you switch from using the 10x objective lens to using the 40x objective lens?
The field of view is inversely proportional to the magnification of the objective lens. For example, if the diameter of your field of view is 1.78 millimeters under 10x magnification, a 40x objective will be one-fourth as wide, or about 0.45 millimeters.
What happens when you switch to a higher power microscope?
Each time you switch to a higher power, the depth of focus is reduced. Therefore a smaller part of the specimen is in focus at higher power. Again, this makes it easier to find an object on low power, and then switch to higher power after it is in focus.
How is the magnification of a microscope determined?
OCULAR LENS or EYEPIECE — On a binocular scope there are two ocular lenses, one for each eye. These lenses magnify the image at 10X power. The power of the ocular lens multiplied by the objective lens gives the total magnification of the microscope.
What happens to the working distance of a microscope?
The working distance decreases as you increase magnification. The high power objective lens has to be much closer to the specimen than the low-power objective lens in order to focus. Working distance is inversely proportional to magnification. Microscopes magnify an object’s appearance by bending light.
Why does a 40x microscope look bigger?
For example, if the diameter of your field of view is 1.78 millimeters under 10x magnification, a 40x objective will be one-fourth as wide, or about 0.45 millimeters. The specimen appears larger with a higher magnification because a smaller area of the object is spread out to cover the field of view of your eye.