MAGNIFICATION - meaning and definition. What is MAGNIFICATION
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What (who) is MAGNIFICATION - definition

PROCESS OF ENLARGING SOMETHING ONLY IN APPEARANCE, NOT IN PHYSICAL SIZE
Magnify; Linear magnification; Linear Magnification; Image Zoom; Angular magnification; Transverse magnification; Angular Magnification; Lateral magnification; Demagnification; Auxometer
  • Stepwise magnification by 6% per frame into a 39-megapixel image. In the final frame, at about 170x, an image of a bystander is seen reflected in the man's [[cornea]].
  • The stamp appears larger with the use of a [[magnifying glass]].

magnification         
(magnifications)
1.
Magnification is the act or process of magnifying something.
Pores are visible without magnification...
N-UNCOUNT
2.
Magnification is the degree to which a lens, mirror, or other device can magnify an object, or the degree to which the object is magnified.
The electron microscope uses a beam of electrons to produce images at high magnifications...
N-VAR
magnification         
¦ noun the action of magnifying or the process of being magnified.
?the degree to which something is or can be magnified.
?the magnifying power of an instrument.
Magnification         
·noun The act of magnifying; enlargement; exaggeration.

Wikipedia

Magnification

Magnification is the process of enlarging the apparent size, not physical size, of something. This enlargement is quantified by a calculated number also called "magnification". When this number is less than one, it refers to a reduction in size, sometimes called magnification or de-magnification.

Typically, magnification is related to scaling up visuals or images to be able to see more detail, increasing resolution, using microscope, printing techniques, or digital processing. In all cases, the magnification of the image does not change the perspective of the image.

Examples of use of MAGNIFICATION
1. Bird mites are half a millimeter long and usually can‘t be seen without magnification.
2. Truman, however, was crucial to the magnification of the president‘s war powers.
3. By the end of the 1'40s, its magnification power had jumped to 200,000 times.
4. In Britain, use of the horn is occasional, but in Varanasi – in some ways an intensification, magnification and concentration of India at large it is constant.
5. "This is the first time we had a high–enough magnification event where we had significant sensitivity to a second planet –– and we found one," Gaudi said.