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Microscope

The document discusses different types of microscopes and their parts and functions. It describes a microscope as an instrument that allows viewing of minute objects too small to be seen by the naked eye. It then outlines three main types: a magnifying glass, which is a single convex lens; a light microscope, which uses lenses to focus light and produce an image; and a compound microscope, which uses a system of ocular and objective lenses. It proceeds to explain the key parts of a microscope, including the eyepiece, nosepiece, objectives, stage, diaphragm, light source, base, condenser, arm, and coarse and fine adjustment knobs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views

Microscope

The document discusses different types of microscopes and their parts and functions. It describes a microscope as an instrument that allows viewing of minute objects too small to be seen by the naked eye. It then outlines three main types: a magnifying glass, which is a single convex lens; a light microscope, which uses lenses to focus light and produce an image; and a compound microscope, which uses a system of ocular and objective lenses. It proceeds to explain the key parts of a microscope, including the eyepiece, nosepiece, objectives, stage, diaphragm, light source, base, condenser, arm, and coarse and fine adjustment knobs.

Uploaded by

amanda_orbe8504
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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THE MICROSCOPE

An instrument which allows one to view minute objects. Which are normally too small to be resolved by the naked eye. Because the acuity or sharpness of the eye is at a maximum of 4 micrometers thus, cannot sense objects smaller than these.

MAGNIFYING GLASS simplest microscope


and is a single convex lens.

LIGHT MICROSCOPE is a common instrument


in most laboratories and makes use of visible light. - Make use of convex lenses to focus the light & produce an image that can be viewed either directly using the naked eye or through the use of a monitor.

COMPOUND MICROSCOPE makes use of


a system of lenses ( the ocular lens & the objectives ).

PARTS AND FUNCTIONS

1. Eyepiece: contains the ocular lens, which


provides a magnification power of 10x to 15x, usually. This is where you look through.

2.Nosepiece: holds the objective lenses and can


be rotated easily to change magnification.

3.Objective lenses: usually, there are three or


four objective lenses on a microscope, consisting of 4x, 10x, 40x and 100x magnification powers. In order to obtain the total magnification of an image, you need to multiply the eyepiece lens power by the objective lens power. So, if you couple a 10x eyepiece lens with a 40x objective lens, the total magnification is of 10 x 40 = 400 times.

4.Stage clips: hold the slide in place.


5.Stage: it is a flat platform that supports
the slide being analyzed.

6.Diaphragm: it controls the intensity


and size of the cone light projected on the specimen. As a rule of thumb, the more transparent the specimen, less light is required.

7.Light source: it projects light


upwards through the diaphragm, slide and lenses.

8.Base: supports the microscope. 9.Condenser lens: it helps to focus the


light onto the sample analyzed. They are particularly helpful when coupled with the highest objective lens. 10.Arm: supports the microscope when carried. 11.Coarse adjustment knob: when the knob is turned, the stage moves up or down, in order to coarse adjust the focus. 12.Fine adjustment knob: used fine adjust the focus.

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