the field of view
field of view
If it is one you can feel with your finger or see with your eyed and it is not the circular ring near the center hole, it is a fault, a blemish, a production error.
A question that is answered with a question that is answered with a question that is... do you see where this is going yet? Circular logic in question form.
Depends on the shape of the area (see the answer to the same question relating to 2 acres). If the area was an infinitely thin strip, the length of fencing would be infinite. For a circular area, the least amount of fencing would be needed.
after you have downloaded the hypercam, At the top left hand you see a HYPERCAM. click it and you see a HyperCam2 appear. Look at " Screen Area ". You see the width and height there. Change it
The field of view
field of view
it some thing on the lens im sure what its called but it marks the middle =)
It is in nucleus.You can see a darker circular area in nucleus when observed an eukariyotic cell through a microscope.
The circle of light you see when you look through a microscope is called the field of view. It represents the area of the specimen that you can see through the microscope's lenses at one time.
That would depend on the magnification you are using.
The circle of light seen in a microscope is called the field of view. It refers to the circular area that is visible when looking through the microscope. The size of the field of view can vary depending on the magnification and type of objective lens being used.
The amount of specimen visible on a microscope is referred to as the field of view. This refers to the diameter of the circular area that is visible when looking through the microscope. The field of view may vary depending on the magnification level of the microscope lens.
The circular area seen through the eyepiece of a microscope or telescope is known as the "field of view." It represents the observable area that the user can see when looking through the instrument. The size of the field of view can vary depending on the magnification and the design of the eyepiece, with lower magnifications generally providing a larger field of view than higher magnifications.
It is the area where slides are placed in order to see what they look like up close because it is too small for the human eye
When you look through the eyepiece of a microscope, you see a magnified view of a small area of the specimen being examined. This area is typically a thin slice or a prepared slide that allows light to pass through, revealing details such as cell structures, organisms, or other microscopic features. The field of view can vary depending on the magnification used, with higher magnifications displaying a smaller area but greater detail.
to look for things that you couldn't normally see, or to look at things closer