Compound Microscope Magnification @ Infinity

AI Thread Summary
Magnification for a compound microscope at infinity is often considered negative due to the inverted nature of the final image. The angular magnification can reach 400X, with an optical tube length of 16cm and a 5mm focal length for the objective. The focal length of the eyepiece is questioned in relation to this magnification. While some argue that the negative sign is specific to compound microscopes, others note that both telescopes and microscopes produce inverted images. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding magnification signs in optical systems.
RachaelD95
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
is magnification negative for a compound microscope at infinity
 
Physics news on Phys.org
welcome to PF
Is this what you wanted? An inverted image implies a negative sign for the magnification.
 
I done a question where the formula was m=(-l0.25/fofe) as the final image was at infinty.
  1. The angular magnification of a microscope is 400X when the final image is at infinity. The optical tube length is 16cm and the focal length of the objective is 5mm. What is the focal length of the eyepiece?

    They took the magnification to be -400x not sure why? The only thing I could take from it was that when its a compound microscope at infinity the magnification is negative.
 
RachaelD95 said:
I done a question where the formula was m=(-l0.25/fofe) as the final image was at infinty.
  1. The angular magnification of a microscope is 400X when the final image is at infinity. The optical tube length is 16cm and the focal length of the objective is 5mm. What is the focal length of the eyepiece?

    They took the magnification to be -400x not sure why? The only thing I could take from it was that when its a compound microscope at infinity the magnification is negative.
Wherever you choose to put the final (virtual) image, the magnification will still have the same sign. Using infinity just makes the calculation easier.
 
So why is the magnification negative? It only seems to be for a compound microscope at infinity the magnification is negative. For a simple magnifier and astrological magnification remains positive
 
RachaelD95 said:
So why is the magnification negative? It only seems to be for a compound microscope at infinity the magnification is negative. For a simple magnifier and astrological magnification remains positive
I don't know where you got that from. Both the astronomical telescope (not the galilean telescope) and the microscope produce inverted real images - which is what the sign tells you. Also, I don't understand where you got the bit about 'focussed at infinity' as being special. You can easily focus a telescope at closer than infinity; for people with short sight and no glasses, for instance. The image is still the same way up! (i.e. inverted)
Are you using more than one source for you information? You may find that the sign has been omitted in one source.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
Back
Top