no it's usless to measure it the microscope
Optical or Light microscope
a magnifying glass, a telescope or microscope all do this.
Mirror.
degree of magnification for a light microscope
light microscopes produce magnified images by focusing visible light rays.
Scientist measure when light rays are emitted by a moving source the speed of light. Depending on the moving force they can also measure bending light.
The lenses of a microscope have shapes that bend light rays, and when we view those bent rays, the object appears larger--a magnifying glass has the same effect.
A light microscope creates a magnified image through a series of lenses. The light rays reflected from the viewed abject, pass through these many lenses and form an enlarged picture of the object. It is able to show the fine details of the object that most people are studying or looking for.
The condenser-- when answering for a microscope!
If light rays did not travel through space there would be no way for them to reach Earth.
No, they cannot due to the fact that the electron microscope does not use light rays to illuminate the object; therefore, colors cannot be see since they are a reflection of light.
A simple microscope has two lenses. One the eye looks through and the objective lens nearest the object being observed. Changing the objective lens changes the magnification of the microscope, and can also change the amount of light on the object. The objective lens draws the light rays together to make a sharp image.