The x-axis is the horizontal axis on a graph. The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.
The vertical axis in a graph.
I believe you mean the x-axis, the horizontal axis on a coordinate plane
An axis would be a line on which somethig rotates.
They refer to the horizontal x axis and the vertical y axis that are perpendicular to each other on the Cartesian plane
HPO = High Positive Offset
When talking about the IPO and HPO, it is referring the magnification of a microscope. You can tell the difference of the two, because the LPO is shorter than the HPO.
The LPO will be shorter than HPO lens. LPO= magnifies 10x lenses HPO= magnifies 43x lenses
If the total magnification is 200x and the objective has a magnification of HPO, then the eyepiece would have a magnification of 200/HPO. So, if the objective has a magnification of 20x (assuming HPO=20), then the eyepiece would have a magnification of 200/20 = 10x.
The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.
The x-axis is the horizontal axis on a graph. The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.
The x-axis is the horizontal axis on a graph. The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.
The vertical axis in a graph.
In a Cartesian grid, the x-axis is the horizontal axis, and the y-axis is the vertical axis.
The HPO (high-power objective) has a higher magnification than the LPO (low-power objective) in a microscope. This means that the HPO will show a smaller area but with more detail compared to the LPO.
I believe you mean the x-axis, the horizontal axis on a coordinate plane
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