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10*100 = 1000 times.

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12y ago

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What is the total magnification if the eyepiece lens has a magnification of 10 times and the objective lens is 10 times?

To quote Wikipedia;"The angular magnification is given by : :: : where Mo is the magnification of the objective and Me the magnification of the eyepiece." So 10x X 20x = 200x


What is the total magnification of the microscope when the low power objective is locked in place?

The total magnification of a microscope when the low power objective is locked in place is the product of the magnification of the eyepiece and the magnification of the objective lens. For most microscopes, the low power objective lens has a magnification of around 10x, and the standard eyepiece magnification is 10x. Therefore, the total magnification would be 100x.


What is the total magnification of a microscope if the microscope is on low power?

Total magnification will be ocular magnification multipled by the objective magnification i.e. 10 x 25 = 250x.AnswerThe last time I checked if the eyepiece is on Low Power that means it is 10x. You must multiply the additional 20x, so the total magnification is 200x.


What is the magnification of a microscope with a 10x ocular and a 95x oil-immersion objective?

950


What is the formula for calculating total magnification on a microscope?

Total magnification on a microscope is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece. For example, if the objective lens magnifies 10 times and the eyepiece magnifies 15 times, then the total magnification would be 10 x 15 = 150 times.


10 times eye piece 40 times objective lens?

Each objective lens has a different magnification. Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens to produce total magnification. For example, a 10X ocular lens and a 40X objective lens will produce a total magnification of 400X (10 x 40 = 400).


How is Specimen magnification figured out on a microscope?

Specimen magnification on a microscope is calculated by multiplying the magnification of the eyepiece by the magnification of the objective lens. For example, if the eyepiece magnifies 10 times and the objective lens magnifies 40 times, the total magnification would be 10 x 40 = 400 times.


How do you determine the total magnification on a light microscope?

Multiply the magnification of the eyepiece (usually 10x) and the magnification of the objective you are using, Example: eyepiece = 10 x objective lense = 40x 10 x 40 = 400 magnification of 400x.


What is the total magnification of a microscope with a 10x Eyepiece and a 40x Objective?

The total magnification of the microscope when using the 40x objective depends on the strength of the eye piece lens. Typically a 10x eye piece lens is used in college microscopes this would give 40x10 = 400x magnification.


How to determine the total magnification when using any objective of your microscope?

Ask a jellyfish yea.....well if you don't have a jellyfish around when you need it, you can also look at the magnifier, so if a regular microscope has 4x under lwo power, it is 40x, due to 10x already when you look through the ocular piece. so medium power is 10x, would be 100 times magnified, and 40x for high is 400 times magnified.


How do you figure out the total magnification of a compound microscope?

multiply the number by 10


What is the magnification of the eyepiece on a microscope?

The magnification of the eyepiece on a microscope is typically 10x. This means that when you look through the eyepiece, the image you see will be magnified 10 times compared to what you would see with the naked eye.