1 / 44

Microscope

Microscope. Basics. T. Trimpe 2005 http://sciencespot.net/. THE DISCOVERY OF CELLS. First Microscopes * *was made by Anton von Leewenhoek.  *Leewenhoek became the FIRST person to OBSERVE and DESCRIBE MICROSCOPIC ORGANISMS and LIVING CELLS. English Scientist Robert Hooke.

Download Presentation

Microscope

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Microscope Basics T. Trimpe 2005 http://sciencespot.net/

  2. THE DISCOVERY OF CELLS First Microscopes* *was made by Anton von Leewenhoek.  *Leewenhoek became the FIRST person to OBSERVE and DESCRIBE MICROSCOPIC ORGANISMS and LIVING CELLS.

  3. English Scientist Robert Hooke • In 1665, used microscope to examine a thin slice of cork • described it as consisting of "a great many little boxes".  • They looked like "little boxes" and reminded him of the small rooms in which monks lived, so he called the "Cells".

  4. German Botanist Matthias Schleiden • In 1838, studied a variety of PLANTS and concluded that all PLANTS "ARE COMPOSED OF CELLS".

  5. German Zoologist Theodor Schwann • The next year, reported that ANIMALS are also made of CELLS and proposed a cellular basis for all life.

  6. German Physician Rudolf Virchow • In 1855, induced that "THE ANIMAL ARISES ONLY FROM AN ANIMAL AND THE PLANT ONLY FROM A PLANT" OR " THAT CELLS ONLY COME FROM OTHER CELLS".

  7. Cell Theory • All living things are compose of cells • Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things • New Cells are produced from existing cells

  8. Diaphragm Base Always carry a microscope with one hand holding the arm and one hand under the base. Ocular lens(Eyepiece) Body Tube Nosepiece Arm Objectives Stage Stage Clips Coarse Adjustment Fine Adjustment Light

  9. EYEPIECE This part allows you to view the image on the stage and contains the ocular lens.

  10. NOSEPIECE This part holds the objective lenses and is able to rotate to change magnification.

  11. OBJECTIVE LENSES • These are found on the nosepiece and range from low to high power.

  12. STAGE CLIPS • These are used to hold a slide • in place on the stage.

  13. LIGHT SOURCE • Projects light upwards through the diaphragm to allow you to see the specimen

  14. ARM • This part on the side of the • microscope is used to support • it when it is carried

  15. COARSE ADJUSTMENTKNOB • This part moves the stage up and down to help you get the specimen into view.

  16. FINE ADJUSTMENTKNOB • This part moves the stage slightly to help you sharpen or “fine” tune your view of the specimen.

  17. DIAPHRAGM • This part of the microscope helps you adjust the amount of light that reaches the specimen

  18. BASE • The bottom part • of the microscope.

  19. STAGE • Part of the microscope that • supports the slide that is • being viewed

  20. COVER SLIP • Name for the small plastic or glass piece that is used to cover a water drop on a slide

  21. SLIDE • Small glass plate on which specimen are placed for viewing

  22. What’s my power? To calculate the power of magnification, multiply the power of the ocular lens by the power of the objective. What are the powers of magnification for each of the objectives we have on our microscopes?

  23. We can see better details with higher the powers of magnification, but we cannot see as much of the image. Which of these images would be viewed at a higher power of magnification? Comparing Powers of Magnification

  24. 3 – Once you have the image in view, rotate the nosepiece to view it under different powers. Draw what you see on your worksheet! Be careful with the largest objective! Sometimes there is not enough room and you will not be able to use it! Let’s give it a try ... 1 – Turn on the microscope and then rotate the nosepiece to click the red-banded objective into place. 2 – Place a slide on the stage and secure it using the stage clips. Use the coarse adjustment knob (large knob) to get it the image into view and then use the fine adjustment knob (small knob) to make it clearer. 4 – When you are done,turn off the microscope and put up the slides you used.

  25. 4 - Slowly lower the cover slip on top of the drop. Cover Slip Lower slowly 5 – Place the slide on the stage and view it first with the red-banded objective. Once you see the image, you can rotate the nosepiece to view the slide with the different objectives. You do not need to use the stage clips when viewing wet-mount slides! How to make a wet-mount slide … 1 – Get a clean slide and coverslip from your teacher. 2 – Place ONE drop of water in the middle of the slide. Don’t use too much or the water will run off the edge and make a mess! 3 – Place the edge of the cover slip on one side of the water drop.

  26. Lots of different shapes and sizes of cells

  27. Sizes • 5 to 50 micrometers • How big is a micrometer? • 1m=100cm=1,000,000 micrometers • 1 micrometer=.000001m • Basically you can’t see it • Remember: KHDmDCM..micro..nano..pico

  28. Chaos chaos • Largest protozoan • You can see without microscope • 1000 micrometers • How many meters is this? • .001 m • How many centimeters is this? • 0.1 cm

  29. 2 things in every cell… • Surrounded by a barrier, cell membrane • At some point in their life they contain…. • DNA

More Related