RankLab
Back to Questions
PhysicsMediumNumerical2012 · 12 May Online

Q23.We wish to make a microscope with the help of two positive lenses both with a focal length of 20 mm each and the object is positioned 25 mm from the objective lens. How far apart the lenses should be so that the final image is formed at infinity? JEE Main 2012 (12 May Online) JEE Main Previous Year Paper (1) 20 mm (2) 100 mm (3) 120 mm (4) 80 mm

What This Question Tests

This question tests the application of lens formula for a compound microscope setup, specifically the condition for the final image to be formed at infinity (image from objective falls at the focal point of the eyepiece), requiring calculation of intermediate image position and then lens separation.

Concepts Tested

Image formation by lensesLens formulaCompound microscope working principleImage at infinity

Formulas Used

1/f = 1/v - 1/u

L = |v_o| + f_e

📚 NCERT Sections This Tests

9.26Assume Microscope In Normal Use I.E., Image At 25 Cm. Angular

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 9

81% match

9.26 Assume microscope in normal use i.e., image at 25 cm. Angular magnification of the eye-piece 25 =  1  6 5 Magnification of the objective 30 =  5 6 1 1 1 − = 5u O u O 1.25 which gives uO= –1.5 cm; v0= 7.5 cm. |ue| (25/6) cm = 4.17 cm. The separation between the objective and the eye-piece should be (7.5 + 4.17) cm = 11.67 cm. Further the object should be placed 1.5 cm from the objective to obtain the desired magnification.

9.9An Object Of Size 3.0Cm Is Placed 14Cm In Front Of A Concave Lens Of

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 9

80% match

9.9 An object of size 3.0cm is placed 14cm in front of a concave lens of focal length 21cm. Describe the image produced by the lens. What happens if the object is moved further away from the lens? 249 Reprint 2025-26 Physics 9.10 What is the focal length of a convex lens of focal length 30cm in contact with a concave lens of focal length 20cm? Is the system a converging or a diverging lens? Ignore thickness of the lenses. 9.11 A compound microscope consists of an objective lens of focal length 2.0 cm and an eyepiece of focal length 6.25 cm separated by a distance of 15cm. How far from the objective should an object be placed in order to obtain the final image at (a) the least distance of distinct vision (25cm), and (b) at infinity? What is the magnifying power of the microscope in each case? 9.12 A person with a normal near point (25 cm) using a compound microscope with objective of focal length 8.0 mm and an eyepiece of focal length 2.5cm can bring an object placed at 9.0mm from the objective in sharp focus. What is the separation between the two lenses? Calculate the magnifying power of the microscope, 9.13 A small telescope has an objective lens of focal length 144cm and an eyepiece of focal length 6.0cm. What is the magnifying power of the telescope? What is the separation between the objective and the eyepiece? 9.14 (a) A giant refracting telescope at an observatory has an objective lens of focal length 15m. If an eyepiece of focal length 1.0cm is used, what is the angular magnification of the telescope? (b) If this telescope is used to view the moon, what is the diameter of the image of the moon formed by the objective lens? The diameter of the moon is 3.48 × 106m, and the radius of lunar orbit is 3.8 × 108m. 9.15 Use the mirror equation to deduce that: (a) an object placed between f and 2f of a concave mirror produces a real image beyond 2f. (b) a convex mirror always produces a virtual image independent of the location of the object. (c) the virtual image produced by a convex mirror is always diminished in size and is located between the focus and the pole. (d) an object placed between the pole and focus of a concave mirror produces a virtual and enlarged image. [Note: This exercise helps you deduce algebraically properties of images that one obtains from explicit ray diagrams.] 9.16 A small pin fixed on a table top is viewed from above from a distance of 50cm. By what distance would the pin appear to be raised if it is viewed from the same point through a 15cm thick glass slab held parallel to the table? Refractive index of glass = 1.5. Does the answer depend on the location of the slab? 9.17 (a) Figure 9.28 shows a cross-section of a ‘light pipe’ made of a glass fibre of refractive index 1.68. The outer covering of the pipe is made of a material of refractive index 1.44. What is the range of the angles of the incident rays with the axis of the pipe for which total reflections inside the pipe take place, as shown in the figure. FIGURE 9.28 Reprint 2025-26 Ray Optics and Optical Instruments (b) What is the answer if there is no outer covering of the pipe?

9.20(A) Determine The ‘Effective Focal Length’ Of The Combination Of

Physics Class 12 · Chapter 9

80% match

9.20 (a) Determine the ‘effective focal length’ of the combination of the two lenses in Exercise 9.10, if they are placed 8.0cm apart with their principal axes coincident. Does the answer depend on which side of the combination a beam of parallel light is incident? Is the notion of effective focal length of this system useful at all? (b) An object 1.5 cm in size is placed on the side of the convex lens in the arrangement (a) above. The distance between the object and the convex lens is 40 cm. Determine the magnification produced by the two-lens system, and the size of the image.