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  2. Optical microscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_microscope

    The actual power or magnification of a compound optical microscope is the product of the powers of the eyepiece and the objective lens. For example a 10x eyepiece magnification and a 100x objective lens magnification gives a total magnification of 1,000×.

  3. Objective (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objective_(optics)

    Two Leica oil immersion microscope objective lenses; left 100×, right 40×. The objective lens of a microscope is the one at the bottom near the sample. At its simplest, it is a very high-powered magnifying glass, with very short focal length. This is brought very close to the specimen being examined so that the light from the specimen comes ...

  4. Eyepiece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyepiece

    The lenses are called the eye lens and the field lens. The focal plane is located between the two lenses. It was invented by Christiaan Huygens in the late 1660s and was the first compound (multi-lens) eyepiece. [2] Huygens discovered that two air spaced lenses can be used to make an eyepiece with zero transverse chromatic aberration.

  5. Magnification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnification

    A telescope, which uses its large objective lens or primary mirror to create an image of a distant object and then allows the user to examine the image closely with a smaller eyepiece lens, thus making the object look larger. A microscope, which makes a small object appear as a much larger image at a comfortable distance for viewing. A ...

  6. Monocular - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocular

    Galilean type Soviet-made miniature 2.5 × 17.5 monocular Diagram of a monocular using a Schmidt-Pechan prism: 1 – Objective lens 2 – Schmidt-Pechan prism 3 – Eyepiece. A monocular is a compact refracting telescope used to magnify images of distant objects, typically using an optical prism to ensure an erect image, instead of using relay lenses like most telescopic sights.

  7. Parfocal lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parfocal_lens

    Zoom lenses (sometimes referred to as "true" zoom) are ideally parfocal, in that focus is maintained as the lens is zoomed (i.e., focal length and magnification changed), which is convenient and has the advantage of allowing more accurate focusing at maximal focal length then zooming back to a shorter focal length to compose the image.

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