1 / 13

Chapter 3 Section 1: Microscopes

Chapter 3 Section 1: Microscopes. Cells Under the Microscope. Objectives:. Describe how scientists measure the length of objects. Relate magnification and resolution in the use of microscopes. Analyze how light microscopes function Compare light microscopes with electron microscopes.

eloise
Download Presentation

Chapter 3 Section 1: Microscopes

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. Chapter 3 Section 1: Microscopes

  2. Cells Under the Microscope Objectives: • Describehow scientists measure the length of objects. • Relatemagnification and resolution in the use of microscopes. • Analyzehow light microscopes function • Comparelight microscopes with electron microscopes. • Describethe scanning tunneling microscope.

  3. Cells Under the Microscope Measuring Cell Structures: Measurements taken by scientists are expressed in metric. The official name of metric system is the International system of measurements, abbreviated SI.

  4. Cells Under the Microscope • Magnification is the quality of making an image appear larger than its actual size. • Resolution is a measure of the clarity of an image.

  5. Cells Under the Microscope • Both high magnification and good resolution are needed to view the details of extremely small objects clearly.

  6. Types of Microscopes

  7. Light Microscopes • Light Microscopes form an image when light passes through one or more lenses to produce an enlarged image of a specimen.

  8. Electron Microscopes • Electron Microscopes form an image of a specimen using a beam of electrons rather than light. • The electron beam and specimen must be in a vaccum so that the electron beam will not bounce off of gas molecules. • Live organisms cannot be viewed with an electron microscope.

  9. Transmission Electron Microscopes • An electron beam is directed at a very thin slice of a specimen stained with metal ions. Some structures become more heavily stained than others.

  10. Transmission Electron Microscope • The heavily stained parts absorb electrons, those that are lightly stained allow electrons to pass through. • The electrons that pass through strike a fluorescent screen, forming an image.

  11. Scanning Electron Microscopes • An electron beam is focused on a specimen coated with a very thin layer of metal. • The electrons that bounce off the specimen form an image on a fluorescent screen. • The image shows a three-dimensional details of the surface of specimen.

  12. Scanning Tunneling Microscope • A needle-like probe measures difference in voltage caused by electrons that leak, or tunnel, from the surface of the object being viewed. • A computer tracks the movement of the probe across the surface of the object.

  13. Scanning Tunneling Microscopes • The image shows a three-dimensional details of the surface of a specimen. • Live specimens and objects as small as atoms can be viewed.

More Related