The letter 'e' is inverted upside down (180 degrees) and inversed or reflected by 180 degrees
the position of the letter is curves
If you place a letter "g" under the microscope, the "g" would be upside down.
the letter "e" gets inverted, so its upside down
no. upside down and backwards
What is the proper salutaion for a PhD in a letter
The LPO will be shorter than HPO lens. LPO= magnifies 10x lenses HPO= magnifies 43x lenses
The complex microscope uses lenses called convex lenses. Now convex lenses converge light to meet at one focal point. They create an =()X like figure where = is straight beams of light () is the convex and X is the converged light. In short, it's because a microscope has a mirror in it. and when you look into it you see the reflection of the item on the slide. On the microscope it is right side up but when you look at it normally it would be upside-down.
The complex microscope uses lenses called convex lenses. Now convex lenses converge light to meet at one focal point. They create an =()X like figure where = is straight beams of light () is the convex and X is the converged light. In short, it's because a microscope has a mirror in it. and when you look into it you see the reflection of the item on the slide. On the microscope it is right side up but when you look at it normally it would be upside-down.
If the orientation of the letter "e" on the slide is exactly the same as it appears in this response, then the image of the "e" would be an inverted reflection. In lamens terms, the "e" would be upside down inside the microscope.
If you're using a compound light microscope (as you most likely are), it will appear to be upside down when you look through the objective lens. The lenses of the microscope provide an inverted image. As the magnification is increased, the clean lines of the letter will appear ragged where the ink was absorbed into the paper. These small imperfections are practically invisible to the unaided eye.
SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope)
magnify it
There are mirrors in the microscope, which cause images to appear upside down and backwards. So a letter p would appear as a letter d through the microscope eyepiece.
There are mirrors in the microscope, which cause images to appear upside down and backwards. So a letter p would appear as a letter d through the microscope eyepiece.
the position of the letter is curves
Why is the image of a letter inverted under a microscope?because it has a mirror below the stage ( the one where the specimens are being examind ) it dont reflects sunlight but also the image of a letter
That you can directly get from the optician..