Naked Science Forum
Non Life Sciences => Technology => Topic started by: hellogreen on 02/12/2008 07:41:31
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How to Measure magnification
How can I see how strong a magnifying glass is?
I bought this magnifying glass (Link removed; it could be an advert. Mod |) and I want
to know how to test it to see how strong it is. I hear a lot of people talk about
magnifying and how strong the magnification is, but I would like to know the true
magnification of my magnifying glass. I have a few of them and some seem stronger then
others. How can I rate these? How can I pin a correct number on mine? How do the companies
that make these come up with these numbers.
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There is a sensible answer to this question.
It all depends on what the 'near point' of your vision happens to be.
A simple magnifying lens acts, more or less, like a very strong pair of reading glasses (convex lens) by taking a close up object and producing a virtual image far enough away so that you can actually focus on it. As you get closer to an object, the angle it subtends at your eye increases - and it looks bigger but blurred. The magnifying glass simply manages to get rid of the 'blurredness'. Brilliant.
If you have become very long sighted in old age (near point of 1m, say), the same focal length of magnifying glass will give you better value than it will give a young person with a near point of 25cm or, even 10cm. The younger person could get so much closer to the original object than you, they won't get 'the benefit' that the old one will.
A microscope has, basically, two lenses. The bottom one (the objective) produces a real, enlarged, image, inside the tube very near your eye and the eyepiece acts like a magnifying glass, allowing you actually to focus on this image.
[:o]
They don't 'do' ray diagrams at School any more - sad.
Take a look in Wickers. . .