What are the general features of a stereoscopic microscope?
What types of illumantion does a compound microscope use?
What is transmitted illumination?
When light passes from below the sample
What is reflected illumination?
Illumination of the sample from the objective side
What do diaphragms do?
They help to focus the incoming light
What does a comparison microscope allow?
What are the main features of a compound micrscope?
What can a fluorescent micrscope be used for?
It is used to identify single cells and heavily used in biological sciences
How does normal light react?
What is linearly polarised light?
When waves are vibrating in one direction
How does polarised light microscopy work?
In polarised light microscopy, what causes the change in polarisation?
The change in polarisation is as a result of the specimen which gives us information of the birefringence of the specimen and thus allowing us to link to a particular material.
Why do we get additional polarisation when the light passes through the sample?
The plane of light travels at a different speed when travelling through the material.
How is the change in polarisation measured in polarised light microscopy?
In order to measure it, you need another polariser and that polariser is rotated and we measure whatever is coming through the polariser on the other side as a function of the polarisation going in.
How can normal light become polarised?
Normal light can become polarised if it passes through a material that only allows transmission of rays in a particular direction, such as a crystal, or a film.
What is an anisotropic material?
An anisotropic material is something that has different properties in different directions of light.
What is an isotropic substance?
A substance that has the same properties in every direction that we pass light throught it.
How does brightfield microscopy illuminate a sample?
What happens to the light in brightfield microcopy after it passes through the condenser?
What is needed for a specimen to be seen in brightfield microscopy?
What can you do to a specimen if it can’t be seen in brightfield microscopy and what is the drawback of this?
A specimen can be stained in oder to visualise it but this can be destructive.
Where is ther light focussed in brightfield microscopy and where is it collected?
We want to illuminate the specimen so all teh light is focused onto it and then everything is collected by the lens on the other side.
What is contrast?
Contrast is the difference between the refractive index between two materials.