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The field number is the diameter of the image area when seen under the eyepiece. This is often written on the side of the eyepiece, as shown on the right. In this case, the eyepiece has a field number of 20 mm. So the image, when seen with the eyepiece only, has a diameter or 20 mm.
To calculate field of view, you need to know the magnification and field number of the microscope's lens currently in use. Divide the field number by the magnification number to determine the diameter of your microscope's field of view.
To calculate the magnification, simply multiply the ocular lens (10x) by the objective lens. With this microscope you can obtain four different magnifications: 40x, 100x, 400x and 1000x. The original diameters of field of view (for) were determined with a transparent mm ruler.
The true field of view is the number of degrees your eyepiece shows you when you use it with your telescope. To calculate this, you divide the apparent field of view by the magnification. For example, I have a zoom eyepiece that can vary its focal length from 24 mm to 8mm.
Suggested clip Calculating Size of an Object - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip Calculating Size of an Object - YouTube
Field diameter is simply the number of millimeters or micrometers you will see in your whole field of view when looking into the eyepiece lens. It is just as if you put a ruler under the microscope and counted the number of lines.
Knowing the diameter of the field of view is important because you can use it to determine an approximate size of the object you are viewing at that given magnification. They can also be measured in micrometers. This information can be very useful.
Suggested clip Field of View - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip Field of View - YouTube
Suggested clip How to calculate magnification - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip How to calculate magnification - YouTube
Since the scale dimensions you used were given in inches, the actual length is 96 inches and the actual width is 48 inches. You need to find the area in square feet. So, convert each scale length to feet before you find the area. Use the unit conversion, 1 foot = 12 inches.
Divide the number of cells in view with the diameter of the field of view to figure the estimated length of the cell. If the number of cells is 50 and the diameter you are observing is 5 millimeters in length, then one cell is 0.1 millimeter long. Measured in microns, the cell would be 1,000 microns in length.
Suggested clip Calculating cell size when looking through a microscope — YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip Calculating cell size when looking through a microscope — YouTube
Specimen Measurement. The measurement of specimen size with a microscope is normally made by using an eyepiece gratitude sometimes referred to as a reticule. This is a x10 eyepiece that has a scale inserted which is in focus at the same time as the specimen.
Suggested clip Calculating magnification from a scale bar — YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip Calculating magnification from a scale bar — YouTube
Suggested clip How to Calculate the Scale Factor of Two Shapes — YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip How to Calculate the Scale Factor of Two Shapes — YouTube
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