The resolution.
The telescope magnifies the image of an object, allowing us to see it in greater detail.
Very little, you will see the planet Earth, and depending on the amount of light available and cloud cover you may be able to see the continents at best, the moon is too far away to see any more detail with the naked eye.
When the image reaches the eye, it is right-side up. The optics in your eye flip the image upside down in the process of absorbing the light. The up-side down image is then sent to your brain. You brain translates it back to right side up, and then creates the image for you to see. The image never appears upside down to you, because your brain does not create the image for you to see until it has flipped it back right-side up.
No. It's what we see. (The amount it actually gives off is called the absolute magnitude.)
The combination of lenses at the viewing end of an optical instrument is called the eyepiece. The purpose of the eyepiece is to magnify the image formed by the objective lens or mirror, allowing the viewer to see a larger and more detailed image.
The telescope magnifies the image of an object, allowing us to see it in greater detail.
The telescope magnifies the image of an object, allowing us to see it in greater detail.
Sorry, but satellite images can't show that level of detail!
cuz you see an image after you look at it
Magnification relates to how large you can see an object - making small items larger than they normally appear. Resolution relates to the amount of detail you can see in the object or image. The higher the resolution, the more detail that is visible.
It zooms in or out on your image; you can see more detail or less with it. I've found that I get smoother lines if I use the magnifier to zoom in on a drawing.
I think the word is called "Self Image"
If the paper is truly see-through, then it is transparent. If you can see light through it, but not a clear image, then it is translucent.
As seen in an image of the landscape, taken by Ansel Adams, the water appears to flow. There appears to be a small water mark on the image I purchased. This depends on whether you're referring to the image you're viewing or the actual structure of the document, eg. painting, photo, negative. Within the image I can see the finest of detail. Unfortunately, on the image there appear to be scratches.
the iris and the lens focus the image to fall on the RETINA.
the image u will c will be refracted...
What image? I don't see an image.