MICROSCOPES SLIDE SHOW NOTES
What is a Microscope?
• An ______instrument used for producing a ______image of a small object.
Did You Know . . . ?
• The microscope is the most important tool for biologists.
• The first cells were seen in ______.
The Beginnings
• Of the five senses, the most important is ______.
– Aids in the process of gathering information about the environment that we are part of.
– The amount of detail that it can provide is severely limited.
• In order to overcome those limitations, humans started to develop instruments like the ______glass, the spectacles, the telescope and the ______.
Founding Fathers of Microscopy
• Credit for the first microscope is usually given to______, around the year 1595.
• The first compound microscopes produced by the Janssen’s were simply a ______with lenses at each end.
• ______remarkable engineering abilities enabled him to invent and improve many mechanical devices, including timepieces and the Gregorian telescope.
• In 1665, he coined the word ______to describe the features of plant tissue (cork from bark of an oak tree).
• ______made simple (one lens) microscopes.
• He was the first person to describe ______(from teeth scrapings) and ______(from pond water).
Compound Light Microscope
• Compound
– Deals with the microscope having ______than one lens.
• Light
– The method by which light transmits the ______to your eye.
• Microscope
– “Micro” =
– “Scope” =
Terminology
• ______- Lens closest to the specimen.
• ______- Lens you look through.
• ______- The total power of the microscope.
• ______- The amount of detail you can see in an image.
• ______- The point at which the light from a lens comes together.
How Does it Work?
• Microscopes take an image of something generally too small to see with the naked eye and magnify that image so that the observer can see it in greater detail.
• To magnify images, a microscope uses several lenses to change the angle at which rays of light strike the eye of the observer.
Microscope Care & Handling
• Transporting -
• Handling -
• Cleaning -
• Storage -
Using the Microscope -
- Before You Start
• Place the microscope on a table with the arm ______you about a fist’s length from the edge of the table.
• The microscope should be on the ______power objective and the stage should be all the way ______.
• The diaphragm should be set on the ______field of view.
- First Focusing
• Place a slide on the stage centering the specimen over the stage ______.
• Use the stage clips to hold the slide in place.
• Looking through the ______, slowly turn the ______adjustment knob until the specimen comes into focus.
- Switching Objectives
• Look at the microscope from the ______.
• Carefully revolve the nosepiece until the ______-power objective lens clicks into place. Make sure the lens does not hit the slide.
• Looking through the eyepiece, use the ______adjustment knob until the specimen comes into focus.