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Gen. Biology: Microscope

The document discusses the parts and functions of a compound light microscope. A compound microscope uses lenses to magnify specimens and has higher magnification than a simple microscope. The key parts are the eyepiece, objective lenses of varying magnification, stage to hold samples, light source, and focus knobs. The eyepiece and objective lenses work together to magnify samples for examination.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views3 pages

Gen. Biology: Microscope

The document discusses the parts and functions of a compound light microscope. A compound microscope uses lenses to magnify specimens and has higher magnification than a simple microscope. The key parts are the eyepiece, objective lenses of varying magnification, stage to hold samples, light source, and focus knobs. The eyepiece and objective lenses work together to magnify samples for examination.

Uploaded by

Slay Saceda
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Gen.

Biology

Microscope- used to magnify organisms/objects that are either far away or not
visible to the naked eye.

Function of a microscope is to:

 Enhance- to raise to a higher degree; intensify; magnify.


 Postulates -a fundamental principle.
- suggest or assume the existence, fact, or truth of (something) as basis for
reasoning, discussion, or belief.
 Specimen- it is a sample of a substance or material for examination.
 Compound Light Microscope- commonly seen in school laboratories.
PARTS AND FUNCTIONS OF A COMPOUND MICROSCOPE
PARTS FUNCTIONS
 Ocular/Eyepiece 6x, 10x or 15x; It enlarges/magnifies the image that is produced by the
objective lenses.
 Objective Lenses - it gathers light and enhances manification; which can range low-power
objective (4x-10x). high-power objective (40x-60x) and oil- immersion
objection (100x)
 Aperture Its ability to gather light and resolve fine specimen detail at a fixed object
distance.
 Body Tube/ Head Attached to the arm; bears the lenses.
 Revolving This is where the different objective lenses are attached; the viewer rotates
Nosepiece/ this to change the magnification power (Total magnification = Eyepiece *
Objective lenses ).
Nosepiece
 Arm It is a short- curved handle which is used for carrying the microscope.
 Adjustment Knob It is the screw that brings the specimen into focus.
 Coarse Adjustment Focuses the image under low power (usually the bigger knob).
Knob
 Fine Adjustment Sharpens the image under all powers (usually the smaller knob).
knob
 Stage Clip It holds the slide/specimen in place.
 Stage/ Mechanical -It is a flat platform where the slide with the specimen is placed.
Stage - if it is a mechanical stage there would be knobs that would help adjust
the position of the slides so you don’t have to move it manually.
 Stage Controls These are knobs that can move the mechanical stage up or down, then left
or right.
 Diaphragm It is located below the stage; it controls the amount of light that passes
through the microscope.
 Condenser Located immediately below the stage just above the diaphragm; it gathers
and focuses the light from the illumination to the specimen.
 Illuminator Light source of microscope; (older microscopes use mirrors while others use
electric lamps).
 Base Supports the entire microscope;
it is also where the illumination is located
 Light Dimmer/
Brightness Controls the intensity of the illuminator
Adjustment
 Switch It turns the illumination on or off.

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