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Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
Magnification is inversely proportional to the diameter of the field of view.
i think that you do math?
The diameter of the center circle on a regular soccer field (100x60 yards) is 20 yards.
depths of Field means The range of distance along the axis of an optical instrument which the object will produce a relatively distinct image
If the entire field of view is 32 mm and the object occupies 25% of that then you will multiply 32 by 0.25. The result is 8 mm.
area of object = (1/3) pi * radius^2 = (1/3) (pi) * (0.6)^2 = 0.377 Find the diameter of this object (assuming it's a circle), and that's the answer: diameter = radius * 2 radius = square root (area / pi) diameter = 2 * square root (area / pi) diameter = 2 * (0.335) = 0.67
Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
0.6 mm
Field diameter of lens B equals field diameter of lens A times total magnification of lens A divided by total magnification of lens B
You can use that to estimate the size of objects that you are observing.
Magnification is inversely proportional to the diameter of the field of view.
ok
Negitive
is a Field.
The field of vision shrinks as the magnification gets higher so as the magnification increases the less of the diameter of the microscopic field you can see.