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Microscopy Lecture I

Microscopy Lecture I. Three branches of Microscopy. Optical Electron Scanning Probe Optical and Electron microscopy measure refraction, diffraction, and reflection of the source radiation Optical uses white light, fluorescent light, or lasers

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Microscopy Lecture I

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  1. Microscopy Lecture I

  2. Three branches of Microscopy • Optical • Electron • Scanning Probe • Optical and Electron microscopy measure refraction, diffraction, and reflection of the source radiation • Optical uses white light, fluorescent light, or lasers • Electron uses electromagnetic radiation/electron beams • Scanning uses a physical probe to interact with the surface of the specimen

  3. Imaging Techniques

  4. Units of Measure • μm - Micrometer • 1,000,000 micrometers = 1 meter • Strand of hair has a diameter of ~ 20-180 μm • 106 • nm - Nanometer • 1,000,000,000 nanometers = 1 meter • 109 • Wavelength of visible light (400-700 nm) • Ǻ - Angstrom • 10,000,000,000 Angstroms = 1 meter • 1010 • Used to measure the size of atoms/bond lengths • Length of a C-H bond in methane is ~1 Angstrom

  5. 0.75% Collagen Crosslinked

  6. 2% Collagen

  7. Handspun Collagen

  8. Optical Microscopy

  9. Properties of light • Reflection • Refraction • Numerical Aperture

  10. Refraction • Change in the direction of a wave (light) due to a change in speed • The straw in the picture looks bent because the light is bending as it moves from the water to the air

  11. Refractive Index (RI) • RI of a material a measure of the speed of light in material • RI is the ratio of the velocity of light in a vacuum to the speed of light in the specified material • Incident angle (θ1) is related to the refraction angle (θ2) by Snell’s Law • n1sin(θ1)=n2sin(θ2) • Used in calculating focusing power of lenses and dispersion properties of prisms

  12. Reflection • Reflection is defined as a change in direction of a wave at an interface between 2 different media so that the waveform returns to the media from which it came • Used in focusing light waves to increase transmitted light

  13. Numerical Aperture • NA of a microscope objective is a measure of its ability to gather light • The more light (higher NA) the better the resolving power of the lens • Better resolution • NA = (n)sin(θ) • n = Refractive Index • θ = ½ the maximum cone of light than can enter the lens • Usually the NA of an objective increases with its magnifying power. • The smallest detail that can be resolved is proportional to: • λ/NA

  14. Optical Microscope • Ocular lens • Objective turret • Objective • Coarse Adjustment • Fine Adjustment • Stage • Light source • Condenser • X-Y Control

  15. Phase Contrast • Uses phase shifted waves of through transparent specimens cause changes in amplitude (contrast) in structures of the specimen • One of the most widely used in biology • No staining required

  16. Compound Light

  17. Phase Contrast

  18. Fluorescence • Fluorescence utilizes fluorescent dyes/stains that fluoresce when radiated with specific wavelengths of light • Typically use mercury or xenon lamps • Fluorescent dyes are extremely useful in identifying/highlighting specific parts of cells that can otherwise go undetected using simple phase contrast • http://www.invitrogen.com/site/us/en/home/support/Tutorials.html

  19. Filter Cube

  20. Live Dead Assay

  21. Confocal Image of Schwann Cells

  22. Green Fluorescent Protein • Class of proteins that naturally fluoresce • First isolated from the jellyfish • 238 amino acid long protein that naturally fluoresces green (509 nm) in the presence of blue (488 nm) light • Through genetic engineering, scientists have artificially engineered many variations of GFP

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