capable of bending when passing through an object‚ when it enters the lens‚ the light gets reversed and magnified through the prisms‚ and eventually enters your eyes. Our eyes are also binocular instruments. This means they take to images and bring them together to form a single‚ high quality image. Binoculars consist of two small telescopes mounted side by side‚ one for each eye‚ and a focusing mechanism. By having a lens system for each eye‚ these instruments provide three-dimensional viewing
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The telescope is an important astronomical tool that gathers and focuses electromagnetic radiation. Telescopes serve to both increase the angular size and the brightness of objects. When we speak about telescopes we are usually referring to optical telescopes‚ but many other types of telescopes also exist for other spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. It is unclear as to who it was that actually invented the telescope but Galileo Galilei is credited as being the first to use a telescope for
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Lori Stenbeck Bio K121 June 7‚ 2012 The Microscope Introduction: The purpose of a microscope is to see either enlarge images of small objects and or make seen what is invisible to the naked eye. We have two types of microscopes available in the lab. The dissecting microscope is designed to study objects in three dimensions at low magnification. The compound microscope is used for examining small or thinly sliced sections of objects under magnification that is higher than the dissecting microscope
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Niall Farrell A2 Psychology Outline and evaluate 2 theories of relationship breakdown . Stephanie Rollie and Steve Duck developed a model of the termination of close and intimate relationships in 2006.This model focuses on the processes that typify relationship breakdown ‚ rather than being tied to distinct phases that people pass through . The 6 stages may appear to overlap or have common features but also serve very different purposes and ultimately have different consequences. Initially
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slaves do it all for them. Next‚ the author uses the first person point- of- view to give a subjective opinion. The narrator says‚ “Gentlefolks in general have a very awkward rock ahead in life- the rock ahead of their own idleness.” This is a bias opinion because not everyone may feel this way about gentlefolks. The point of view allows the reader to give his own conception of the idle rich‚ pointless and corrupted. Slaves believe that the rich have too much free time‚ so “they drift blindfold
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click switch views to look into microscope. When looking through the microscope adjust the ocular lens until the two circles of light emerge as one. Adjust the coarse focus down until specimen appears. Use the fine focus knob for clarity of the image‚ xy controls to get the area of interest into view‚ and the iris to control the brightness of the image. Once image is focused the objective lens may be changed and you can then begin to view the specimen within a higher power of magnification
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Notes for WK2 – 10 September Lesson 1 * State the resolution and magnification that can be achieved by an electron microscope. * explain the need for staining samples for use in electron microscopy Lesson 2 * calculate linear magnification of an image such as photomicrograph or electron micrograph Key words * Resolution= the ability to distinguish 2 separate points as distinct from each other. * Magnification= the number of times greater an image is than the actual object
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individuals overestimate the expected future sales and employment. To explain variations in overoptimism‚ I posit that those individuals who adopt an inside view to forecasting through the use of plans and financial projections‚ will exhibit greater ex ante bias in their expectations. Consistent with the inside view causing overoptimism in expectations‚ I find that the preparation of projected financial statements results in more overly optimistic venture sale forecasts. Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons‚ Ltd
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variables that impact the witness’s accuracy and instill a bias against the suspect. Some of these variables include cross-racial identification and poor lighting (Brewer & Wells‚ 2011). The cross-racial bias is when someone of one race is able to more easily identify another member of their own race‚ and their ability to identify someone of another race is impaired (Rutledge‚ 2016). In an effort to decrease the prevalence of the cross-racial bias‚ psychologists have recommended the use of double-blind
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PRE-REQUISITES REQUIREMENTS TO JUVENILE OFFENDERS TRIAL ……………………………… 6 * CONSIDERATION FOR JUVENILES BY COURT * POWERS OF THE JUVENILE COURT CHAPTER FOUR: BIASES IN JUVENILE SENTENCING ……………………………………………………………………………. 7-8 * GENDER BIAS * SYSTEM BIAS * DUE PROCESS &THE JUVENILE DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 9 RECOMMENDATIONS …………………………………………………………….……………………………………………………..........10 BIBLIOGRAPHY ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
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