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Microscopy

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... lenses in a tube, leading to the forerunner of the microscope and the telescope. In the late 1600's, Anton van Leeuwenhoek was the first to see bacteria, yeast, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microscopy


1
Microscopy
  • Light and Electron Microscopy

2
The First Light Microscopes
  • Around 1590 Zaccharias and Hans Janssen
    experimented with lenses in a tube, leading to
    the forerunner of the microscope and the
    telescope
  • In the late 1600s, Anton van Leeuwenhoek was the
    first to see bacteria, yeast, and many other
    microbes using a microscope

3
How Light Microscopes Work
  • First, the objective lens gathers light from the
    specimen and magnifies the image
  • Most microscopes have several objective lenses
    that can be rotated into position to provide
    different levels of magnification (4X, 10X, 40X)
  • The ocular lens in the eyepiece magnifies and
    transmits the image to your eye
  • The magnification of the ocular lens is 10X
  • To find the total magnification of the microscope
    you are using, multiply the magnification of the
    objective lens by the magnification of the ocular
    lens.
  • For example 40X (objective lense) x 10X (ocular
    lense) 400X magnification

4
The Parts of a Light Microscope
  • Light source Could be a mirror, but most likely
    it is a bulb built into the base
  • Diaphragm Adjusts the amount of light striking
    an object
  • Objective lens Gathers light and magnifies image
  • Ocular lens (eyepiece) Magnifies objects and
    focuses light to your eye
  • Stage Holds slide
  • Can be moved using the coarse or fine adjustment
    knobs to bring the object into focus
  • Stage clips Hold slide in place
  • Base and arm Structural support for the
    microscope

5
Can you name the parts?Start on the left side
and work from the top down. Then go to the right
side and work from the top down.
Ocular lens (eyepiece)
Arm
Objective Lenses
Stage clip
Stage
Course adjustment
Diaphragm
Fine adjustment
Light Source
Base
  • Nice Job !

6
Images Produced by Light Microscopes
Amoeba
Streptococcus bacteria
Anthrax bacteria
Plant cells
Human cheek cells
Yeast cells
7
Beyond Light Microscopes
  • Light microscopes are limited by their
    resolution.
  • Light microscopes cannot produce clear images of
    objects smaller than 0.2 micrometers
  • The electron microscope was invented in the
    1930s by Max Knott and Ernst Ruska
  • Electron microscopes use beams of electrons,
    rather than light, to produce images
  • Electron microscopes can view objects as small as
    the diameter of an atom

8
(No Transcript)
9
Types of Electron Microscopes
  • Transmission electron microscopes (TEMs) pass a
    beam of electron through a thin specimen
  • Scanning electron microscopes (SEMs) scan a beam
    of electrons over the surface of a specimen
  • Specimens from electron microscopy must be
    preserved and dehydrated, so living cells cannot
    be viewed

10
Images Produced by Electron Microscopes
Cyanobacteria (TEM)
Lactobacillus (SEM)
Campylobacter (SEM)
Deinococcus (SEM)
Avian influenza virus
House ant
Yeast
Human eyelash
11
Using Microscopes to Visualize the Three Shapes
of Bacteria
  • Cocci (round)
  • Bacilli (rod)
  • Spirilla (spiral)
  • Light microscope

Three shapes of bacteria taken with an SEM
Spirilla
Bacilli
Cocci
12
References
  • http//education.denniskunkel.com/catalog/product_
    info.php?products_id1123
  • http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/
  • http//inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blrob
    erthooke.htm
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