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If you look at a thick opaque object through a compound microscope, you would likely see little to no details as the object is blocking the passage of light. Additionally, the object may appear dark or shadowed since light cannot pass through it to form an image on the microscope's lens.
The compound light microscope got its name because it uses multiple lenses (compound) to magnify the image and relies on light to illuminate the specimen being viewed.
Objects do not get new names because you are looking at them through a microscope; if you put a hair under a microscope, then it is still a hair when you look at it. Microscopes are often used to look at cells, bacteria, pollen, minerals, etc. You can look at lots of things. The names do not change. Cells are still cells, when examined under a microscope.
moon
On the microscope stage (after it has been mounted on a glass microscope slide).
The 'object lens' in a compound microscope is closest to the object being examined.
The objective lens of a compound microscope is the lens closest to the object being examined. It is responsible for magnifying the image of the specimen.
The 'object lens' in a compound microscope is closest to the object being examined.
The object being examined is placed directly under the objective lens of a compound microscope. The objective lens is the lens closest to the specimen and is used to magnify the image of the object.
The 'object lens' in a compound microscope is closest to the object being examined.
A simple microscope has only one lens and can magnify an object up to 15 times the object's size. A compound microscope has two lenses and can magnify an object more than 2,000 times.
The objective lenses of a compound microscope are the parts that magnify the object being viewed. These lenses are located close to the specimen and provide the initial magnification before the image is further magnified by the eyepiece.
The compound microscope is called compound because the modifier compound means "two or more." A compound microscope has two or more lenses lenses. This is to be distinguished from a simple microscope which has one lens. Such a microscope is structurally equivalent to a magnifying glass, though not necessarily a hand held lens.
The advantage of a parfocal microscope=when different objective lenses are rotated, the object being examined will remain in view
The compound microscope got its name because it uses multiple lenses (a combination or compound) to magnify the object being viewed. This design allows for higher magnification and a greater level of detail than a single-lens or simple microscope.
It is a compound microscope because it has more one lens between the object and eye of the viewer.
The ocular and objectives