the compound microscope
most common form of microscope used in science
parts of the microscope
the ocular lenses- or eye pieces
objective lenses- primary lenses which ,magnify your specimen
the turret- where the objective lenses are mounted it typically hold 3 or 4 lenses to allow various magnifications
a stage- onto which your sample is placed
a condenser- which focusses the light passing into your sample
a diaphragm- which control the amount of light and also the depth of field
a light source- which may or may not be colour corrected
focussing knobs- which allow you to bring your samples into sharp focus
the compound microscope consists of several magnifying systems
compound microscope overall magnification
affected by the chosen combination of objective and ocular lens
compound microscope objective lens
housed in 4 position turret enabling the selection of objectives of increasing magnification
- colour coded lenses egg 4x in yellow, 10x in red
compound microscope ocular lens
simply be removed and replaced by on of higher magnification
objective lens
the lens
numerical aperture
resolution
ability of a lens to clearly distinguish fine detail or resolve minute entities
limits of resolution
bright field compound microscopy
dark field compound microscopy
phase contrast microscopy
phase contrast microscopy- understanding the technique requires
phase contrast microscopy- how does the phase contrast technique work
areas of our sample which absorb light or cause significant phase differences appear dark, whereas other areas will cary in brightness according to their thickness and the way in which they interact with the light
phase contrast compound microscopy - recombined waves
phase contrast microscopy- increasing contrast
to do this must increase phase difference between light which passes thought hr sample and light which doesn’t
- add annular ring between light source and condenser
phase ring slows down light passing through the centre more than light passing through its outside typically by 1/4
so when the two beans recombine they differ by 1/2 wavelength which increases contrast
polarising light compound microscopy
polarising light to bring out more detail and use the microscope as a true analytical instrument
the stereo microscope
-Unique in design and utility
-Used for low-medium power magnification (0.7 to 100x) of objects
-Long working distance and high depth of field
-Relies on light reflected from the subject and hence does require an external or built in reflective light source
-Has 2 separate light paths with slightly different viewing angles
which gives a 3D (stereoscopic) visualisation of the subject
comparison microscope
comparison macroscope
Used for the comparison of tool marks and firearms paraphernalia
- Essentially 2 low-medium power microscopes (macroscopes)
connected via an optical bridge
-low magnification
electron microscopy
transmission electron microscopy
scanning electron microscopy