Physics, asked by seema5145, 10 months ago

Construction of binoculars in brief

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Modern binoculars consist of two barrel chambers with an objective lens, eyepiece, and a pair of prisms inside. The prisms reflect and lengthen the light, while the objective lenses enhance and magnify images due to stereoscopic vision.

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Answered by brainer9657
1

Answer:

Modern binoculars consist of two barrel chambers with an objective lens, eyepiece, and a pair of prisms inside. The prisms reflect and lengthen the light, while the objective lenses enhance and magnify images due to stereoscopic vision.

Binoculars rely on pairs of prisms to fold and erect the image in each tube assembly (binocular half). Doubled roof prisms are small and light enough that a pair of binoculars designed around them can have short, straight, and lightweight tubes.

Binocular parts

Birding binoculars have three basic elements: the front lenses, the rear lenses, and the prisms. The front lenses are called the objective lenses. They gather the light and focus an image of the object inside the binoculars. The rear lenses are called the eyepieces.

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Binoculars are simply two telescopes side by side, one for each eye. But there's a catch. When light rays from a distant object pass through a convex lens, they cross over. ... So binoculars have a pair of prisms (large wedges of glass) inside them to rotate the image through 180 degrees

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