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The Microscope

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Title: The Microscope


1
The Microscope
  • Chapter 7

2
Introduction
  • A microscope is an optical instrument that uses a
    lens or a combination of lenses to magnify and
    resolve the fine details of an object.
  • The earliest methods for examining physical
    evidence relied solely on the microscope.
  • The magnified image seen by looking through a
    lens is known as a virtual image, whereas an
    image viewed directly is known as a real image.
  • The object to be magnified is placed under the
    lower lens, called the objective and viewed
    through the upper lens, called the eyepiece.
  • Various types of microscopes are used to analyze
    forensic specimens.

3
The Compound Microscope
  • In the basic compound microscope, the object to
    be magnified is placed under the lower lens
    (objective lens) and the magnified image is
    viewed through the upper lens (eyepiece lens).
  • The magnification of the image can be calculated
    by multiplying the magnifying power of the
    objective lens times the magnifying power of the
    eyepiece lens.
  • The microscope is composed of a mechanical system
    which supports the microscope, and an optical
    system which illuminates the object under
    investigation and passes light through a series
    of lens to form an image of the specimen.

4
The principle of the compound microscope. The
passage of light through two lenses forms the
virtual image of the object seen by the eye.
5
The Compound Microscope
  • The Mechanical System
  • Base the support.
  • Arm the C-shaped upright structure.
  • Stage the plate on which the specimens are
    placed.
  • Body Tube the hollow tube on which the
    objectives and eyepiece lenses are mounted.
  • Coarse Adjustment the knob used to focus the
    microscope lenses by moving the body tube.
  • Fine Adjustment the knob also used to focus the
    lenses by moving the body tube, but by a much
    smaller magnitude.

6
The Compound Microscope
  • The Optical System
  • Illuminator artificial light, usually supplied
    by a light bulb, to illuminate the specimen.
  • Transmitted Illumination when the light is
    directed up through the specimen from the base.
  • Vertical or Reflected Illumination when the
    light comes from above and reflects off the
    specimen.
  • Condenser lens system under the microscope stage
    that focuses light onto the specimen.

7
The Compound Microscope
  • The Optical System
  • Objective Lens the lens closest to the specimen
    usually several objectives are mounted on a
    revolving nosepiece.
  • Parafocal when the microscope is focused with
    one objective in place, another objective can be
    rotated into place and the specimen remains very
    nearly in correct focus.
  • Eyepiece or Ocular Lens the lens closest to the
    eye.
  • Monocular a microscope having only one eyepiece
  • Binocular a microscope having two eyepieces.

8
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9
The Comparison Microscope
  • The comparison microscope consists of two
    independent objective lenses joined together by
    an optical bridge to a common eyepiece lens.
  • When a viewer looks through the eyepiece lens of
    the comparison microscope, the objects under
    investigation are observed side-by-side in a
    circular field that is equally divided into two
    parts.
  • Modern firearms examination began with the
    introduction of the comparison microscope, with
    its ability to give the firearms examiner a
    side-by-side magnified view of bullets.

10
The Stereoscopic Microscope
  • The stereoscopic microscope is actually two
    monocular compound microscopes properly spaced
    and aligned to present a three-dimensional image
    of a specimen to the viewer, who looks through
    both eyepiece lenses.
  • It is particularly useful for evidence not
    requiring very high magnification (10x125x).
  • Its large working distance makes it quite
    applicable for the microscopic examination of
    big, bulky items.

11
 Schematic diagram of a stereoscopic microscope.
This microscope is actually two separate
monocular microscopes, each with its own set of
lenses except for the lowest objective lens,
which is common to both microscopes.
12
Polarizing Microscopy
  • Light that is confined to a single plane of
    vibration is said to be plane-polarized.
  • The examination of the interaction of
    plane-polarized light with matter is made
    possible with the polarizing microscope.
  • Polarizing microscopy has found wide applications
    for the study of birefringent materials
    materials that split a beam of light in two, each
    with its own refractive index value.
  • The determination of these refractive index data
    provides information that helps to identify
    minerals present in a soil sample or the identity
    of a man-made fiber.

13
Polarization of light.
14
The Microspectrophotometer
  • The microspectrophotometer is a spectrophotometer
    coupled with a light microscope.
  • The examiner studying a specimen under a
    microscope can simultaneously obtain the visible
    absorption spectrum or IR spectrum of the
    material being observed.
  • This instrument is especially useful in the
    examination of trace evidence, paint, fiber, and
    ink evidence.

15
The Scanning Electron Microscope
  • Finally, the scanning electron microscope (SEM)
    bombards a specimen with a beam of electrons
    instead of light to produce a highly magnified
    image from 100x to 100,0000x.
  • Its depth of focus is some 300 times better than
    optical systems at similar magnification.
  • The bombardment of the specimens surface with
    electrons normally produces X-ray emissions that
    can be used to characterize elements present in
    the material under investigation.

16
A schematic diagram of a scanning electron
microscope displaying the image of a gunshot
residue particle. Simultaneously, an X-ray
analyzer detects and displays X-ray emissions
from the elements lead (Pb), antimony (Sb), and
barium (Ba) present in the particle.
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