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How Does a Magnifying Glass Work?

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How Does a Magnifying Glass Work?

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A magnifying glass is simply a convex lens meant to be held up to an object to see it magnified. It is a very simple form of microscope, and its invention allowed many later breakthroughs in optics to occur. The magnifying glass is most notably seen in mystery fiction, and is iconically associated with the fictional character Sherlock Holmes, who used a magnifying glass to study the scene of a crime in order to locate clues. The earliest magnifying glass recorded was created by the master scientist Alhazen, in 1021. He published a comprehensive work, The Book of Optics which laid out many principles of optics, and many interesting devices. One of these was described as, “a magnifying device, a convex lens forming a magnified image,” the first known magnifying glass. This basic invention went on to inspire many other inventions, including the microscope, which helped revolutionize the fields of biology and chemistry. The magnification of a magnifying glass is determined by the optical p

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A magnifying glass works by creating a magnified virtual image of an object behind the lens. The distance between the lens and the object must be shorter than the focal length of the lens for this to occur. Otherwise, the image appears smaller and inverted, and can be used to project images onto surfaces. The framed lens may be mounted on a stand, keeping the lens at the right distance from the table, and therefore at the right distance from the object on the table. The latter applies if the object is small, and also if the height is adjustable. Some magnifying glasses are foldable (from the handle or stand). A sheet magnifier consists of many very narrow concentric ring-shaped lenses, such that the combination acts as a single lens but is much thinner. This arrangement is known as a Fresnel lens. A loupe is a small magnification device used by surgeons, dentists, jewelers, watchmakers, and other precision craftsmen. The magnification of jewelers’ loupes for studying gemstones is typic

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Magnifying glasses work because the speed of light is not constant and unchanging. Lots of people think that the speed of light does not change. But it does and that’s how magnifying lenses work. When light goes through the lens, its speed changes. That bends the light and our eyes follow it out to where a larger object should be. That’s the other thing we usually misunderstand. Magnifying glasses do not make things bigger. Instead they make things seem bigger.

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A magnifying glass makes an object look bigger. Holding it close to an object makes a virtual image of the object form on the same side of the glass as the object. When you look through the magnifying glass, this virtual object seems to be larger than the real one. The thicker the lens, the larger the virtual image.

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