Concept:
A compound microscope is an optical instrument used to observe very small objects by producing highly magnified images using two convex lenses:
Objective lens
Eyepiece lens
Construction:
Consists of two coaxial convex lenses mounted at the ends of a tube.
Objective:
Short focal length
Small aperture
Placed close to the object
Eyepiece:
Relatively larger focal length than objective
Acts as a magnifying glass
Placed near the eye
The distance between lenses is adjustable (tube length).
Ray Diagram (Description):
Object placed just beyond focal point of objective.
Objective forms a real, inverted, enlarged intermediate image.
This image lies within the focal length of the eyepiece.
Eyepiece produces a virtual, magnified final image.
Working:
Step 1: Formation of intermediate image.
Object placed slightly beyond the focal length of objective.
Objective forms:
Real
Inverted
Magnified image inside the tube
Step 2: Final image formation.
Intermediate image acts as object for eyepiece.
Eyepiece acts as a simple magnifier.
Final image is:
Virtual
Highly magnified
Inverted relative to original object
Magnifying Power (optional formula):
For final image at least distance of distinct vision \( D \):
\[
M = \left(\frac{L}{f_o}\right)\left(1 + \frac{D}{f_e}\right)
\]
Where:
\( L \) = tube length
\( f_o \) = focal length of objective
\( f_e \) = focal length of eyepiece
Conclusion:
A compound microscope achieves high magnification by:
Objective producing a real magnified intermediate image
Eyepiece further magnifying it as a virtual image