lab microscopy
combined with
a 10X objective, these create total magnifications of 40X, 100X, 400X, and 1000X
resoultion
ability of a lens to distinguish closey placed points or fine details
condenser lens
beneath the stage focuses light on the specimen
a third lense
called the condenser, is located under the stage.
contrast
diffrence inbirghtness or color between an object and its background
rotating nose piece
disk which turns to change objectives
working distance
distance ( in mm) between the tip of the objective an dthe civerslip when the object is in sharp focus
condenser lense
does NOT magnify the image. It concentrates the light into a cone as it passes through the specimen to help produce the clearest image possible
Transmission electron microscopes (TEMs)
focus a beam of electrons through a specimen are used mainly to study the internal structure of cells
mechanical stage
holds a slide snuggly on the stage;knobs change the slide potion on the stage
100x
is designed to be used only when a drop of oil fills the air space between the slide and this objective THUS IS called OIL IMMERSION OBJECTIVE
feild of view
is the area of the specimen that can be seen in the microscope. As magnification increases, the field of view gets proportionally smaller .For example, if the field of view is 5 mm in diameter at 40X, it will have a diameter 2 mm of at 100X.
coarse adjustment knob
large knob on the lower arm used to achieve inital focus
condenser
lens below the stage that produces a cone of light to illuminate the object;notes the knob which raises and lowers the condenser to adjust the brightness of the field
Parfocal
lens that stays in focus when magnification/focal length is changed
irris diaphragm
located below the condenser;regulates brightness by increasing or decreasing the amount of light entering the condenser
the 10x objective is called the
low power objective
Base
lower portion of the microscope that supports the instrument
the use of microscope is called
microscopy
objective lens
mounted rotating nosepiece just above the stage, collect light from the specimen and forms an enlarged, inverted image called REAL IMAAGE
the real image produced by onjective lens is futher enlarged by the
oculars or eyepeices
total magnification
of a microscope is the product of the objective lens magnification and the ocular lens magnification. (multiply them together)
ocular lens
produces a virtual image and magnifies the image
total magnifciation
product of the magniifcation of the objective and magnification of the ocular
lamp
provides light to illuminate the object
40x
provides the greatest magnification without oil and is called the HIGH POWER
stage
rectangular surface on which a slide is place for examinantion
The magnification of a microscope is changed by
rotating in different objective lenses.
the 4x objective is called the ___________
scanning objective because it is used primary to locate an object on the microscope slide,
Simple Mircoscope
single lens first one ( VON LEEWENHOEK Late 1600;s); it had: focusc knob, lens, sample holder, sample translator
fine adjustment knob
small knob on the. lower arm used to bring the object into sharp focus
All prokaryotes are unicellular organisms, but many prokaryotes grow in groups rather than lone cells
staphylo - clusters of cells- strepto - chains of cells
Fluorescence microscopy: cytoskeletal structure in animal cells
Green emitting fluorophore labels microtubules (tubulin) Red emitting fluorophore labels microfilaments (actin) Blue emitting fluorophore labels DNA
resoultion
the measure of the clarity of the image, or the minimum distance of two distinguishable points can be defined as either: diameter of smallest visible object or shortest distance at which 2 objects can be distinguished Smaller values of resolution are better than larger values is essentially the clarity or amount of detail in an image.
Magnification
the ratio of an object's image size to its real size how many times bigger the image is compared to the object Light microscopes typically use magnification between 2X - 2,000X Most microscopes in biology labs use magnifications of 40X, 100X, 400X and 1000X
a compound microscope
two magnifying lenses: Results in more efficient magnification utilizing smaller lenses• Total magnification = ocular mag. X objective mag. example: janssen compund ( late 1600) powell& lealnad no1 (1850)
object less than 0.1 mm in diameter are undistinusgished by
unaided human eye
arm
vertical bar used to grasp and carry the mircoscope
dept of focus
vertical dimesnion (depth( of teh specimen in fous using a particular objective
the oculars produce a
virtual image
contrast
visible differences in parts of the sample ability to distinguish an object from its background improved by special types of microscopy and staining
fluorscence
when a light-absorbing molecule called a fluorophore absorbs one color of light and emits a different color
Most light microscopes are equipped with
4X, 10X, 40X and 100X objective lenses.
objective lens
4x,10x,40xx or 100x lens producing a real image; mounted on the rotating noseplate
two lenses magnify the image in a compound microscope:
A binocular microscope has two ocular lenses, one for each eye the ocular lens (eyepiece) and the objective lens.
depth of focus
As magnification increases, the depth of focus decreases depth of focus decreases as magnification increase therefore, always begin focusing with the lowest power objective.
Scanning electron microscopes (SEMs
) focus a beam of electrons onto the surface of a specimen, providing images that look 3-DElectron Microscopy
plane or focus
Only a "slice" of the specimen
your objective lenses are
PARFOCAL
compound mircoscope
(4x, 10 X, 40x,100x)
Prokaryotic cells are typically either spherical or rod-shaped
- cocci - spherical cells- bacilli - rod-shaped cells
How to focus a light microscope
1. Make sure the light is not too bright 2. Make sure lowest power objective is in place 3. Raise the stage all the way up using the course focus knob 4. Look through the eyepiece and slowly lower the stage using the course focus knob until the specimen is mostly in focus 5. Use the fine focus knob to adjust to perfect focus
A three lens system produces that images seen through the microscope
1. the condenser 2. objective kens 3. ocular lens
The ocular lens typically magnifies
10x
stains
Biomolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids are typically negatively charged and will bind to cationic dyes
Limitations of Light Microscopy
The resolution of light microscopes is limited by the wavelengths of light. • Light microscopes can resolve objects down to about 200 nm in size
Fluorescence Microscopy
The specimen is labeled by fluorophores designed to target specific molecules and cellular structures•The microscope uses a laser to excite the fluorophore, and the emitted light is observed using a filter that blocks out the light from the laser •Multiple fluorophores can be used simultaneously
depth of focus (or focal depth)
The thickness of the plane of focus is
types of microscopes
Types of microscopes• Light microscope: simple, compound, fluorescence Electron microscopes: TEM, SEM
electron mirscope
Uses streams of accelerated electrons rather than light• Electrons are focused by magnets rather than glass lenses• Can resolve structures down to 0.5 nm• Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)• transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)