* What is an electron
microscope?
Invented by a German physicist named Ernst Ruska, electron
microscopes are mostly
used in archaeology, medicine, and geology to look at surfaces or
layers of objecs. Rather than using light, electron
microscopes use electrons to produce
images. They have high resolution and can magnify in small
detail.
* What is a compound
microscope?
Used mostly in biology, compound
microscopes have two or more double
convex lenses. They produce a 2-D slice image of an object, yet can
attain a high enough magnification to see a hair strand.
Unfortunately, they do not have excellent resolution, so the image
may be blurred. On the other hand, stereoscopic
microscopes, as the name implies,
provide a 3-D picture of bisected items, like muscle tissue or an
organ.
Compound
microscopes are
the simplest type of
microscope and are found in many
classrooms. Compound
microscopes are operated entirely by
hand and use ordinary ambient light from the sun or light bulb. The
specimen is mounted between two glass slides, and the
microscope system uses a simple
series of magnifying lenses and mirrors to bring the image to the
eyepiece, much like a telescope.
* What is a stereo
microscope?
While a compound
microscope provides a 3-D picture, a
stereo
microscope
provides a 3-D picture of bisected items such as muscle tissue or
organs. A stereo
microscope is a lower-powered
microscope with low
magnification. Although you cannot make out separate cells, it does
allow for closer viewing of the non-microscopic world.
This
microscope makes
tiny objects gigantic and is sometimes called a dissecting
microscope. Inexpensive
models of stereo
microscopes are available for
schools and students. The stereo
microscope has a zoom as well as
improved optics and lighting and can be used for professional
purposes.
* What is a confocal
microscope?
A confocal
microscope is
a step down from those above. It uses a laser beam to illuminate a
specimen. Then, the image is digitally enhanced and viewed on a
computer monitor. The specimen is often dyed a bright color for a
more contrasting image. Unlike compound
microscopes, confocal
microscopes are controlled
automatically with motorized mirrors that help with auto-focus.
* What is a digital
microscope?
Made up of a digital camera unit and a controller, a digital
microscope is fairly new
to microscopy. It utilizes USB technology to produce live images
viewable on a computer monitor. A high pixel color CCD and light
are built into the camera unit. It makes use of inverted lens
design and has a rotatable lamp. The controller has various
functions such as display, record, measurement, etc. The digital
microscope allows for
quick observation, analysis and data processing without much
preparation.
types of
microscopes |
stereo microscope
Links
Binocular Microscope
Metallurgical Microscope
Date Published: Jan 04, 2011 - 11:28 pm
Microscopes are
mechanical devices used for viewing objects and materials so minute
in size that they are undetectable by the naked eye. The process
conducted with such an instrument, called Microscopy, uses the
combined schools of optical science and light reflection,
controlled and manipulated through lenses, to study small objects
at close range.
The basic
microscope
consists of several complex and interrelated parts: a cylinder that
provides a necessary space of air between the ocular lens (eye
piece) situated at the top and the objective lens fixed at the
bottom, hovering close to a stage containing an optical assembly on
a rotating arm and a centered hole through which a light shines
from a solid U-shaped stand beneath. Magnifying values for the
ocular range through X5, X10, to X20, while the values for the
objective lens has a broader span: X5, X10, X20, X40, X80, and
X100. These values provide the observer with a spectrum of possible
distance orientations and degrees of sharpness as are necessary for
viewing and analysis.
Several different kinds of
microscopes exist, each having
particular features:
Optical
Microscope: The
first ever created. The optical
microscope has one or two lenses
that work to enlarge and enhance images placed between the
lower-most lens and the light source.
Simple Optical
Microscopeuses one lens, the convex
lens, in the magnifying process. This kind of
microscope was used by Anton Van
Leeuwenhoek during the late-sixteen and early-seventeenth
centuries, around the time that the
microscope was invented.
Compound Optical
Microscopehas two lenses, one for
the eyepiece to serve the ocular perspective and one of short focal
length for objective perspective. Multiple lenses work to minimize
both chromatic and spherical aberrations so that the view is
unobstructed and uncorrupted.
Stereo
Microscope: This
is also known as the Dissecting
Microscope, and uses two separate
optical shafts (for both eyes) to create a three-dimensional image
of the object through two slightly different viewpoints. This kind
of
microscope conducts
microsurgery, dissection, watch-making, small circuit board
manufacturing, etc.
Inverted
Microscope:
This kind of
microscope
views objects from an inverted position than that of regular
microscopes. The
inverted
microscope
specializes in the study of cell cultures in liquid.
Petrographic
Microscope:
This kind of
microscope
features a polarizing filter, a rotating stage, and gypsum plate.
Petrographic
Microscopes
specialize in the study of inorganic substances whose properties
tend to alter through shifting perspective.
Pocket
Microscope: This
kind of
microscope
consists of a single shaft with an eye piece at one end and an
adjustable objective lens at the other. This old-style
microscope has a case for easy
carry.
Electron
Microscopes:
This kind of
microscope
employs electron waves running parallel to a magnetic field
providing higher resolution. Two Electron
Microscopes are the Scanning
Electron
Microscope and
the Transmission Electron
Microscope.
Scanning Probe
Microscope: This kind of
microscope measures
interaction between a physical probe and a sample to form a
micrograph. Only surface data can be collected and analyzed from
the sample. Types of Scanning Probe
Microscopes include the Atomic Force
Microscope, the Scanning
Tunneling
Microscope,
the Electric Force
Microscope, and the Magnetic Force
Microscope.
Science wouldnt be what it is today without the
microscope, as this device is the
primary instrument by which the world and all of its elements are
measured and assessed. It is with the
microscope that we take a look
inside of ourselves so we can learn and understand who we are and
how we work.
parts of a microscope |
binocular microscope
Links
Binocular Microscope
Metallurgical Microscope
Date Published: Jan 04, 2011 - 11:28 pm