Micropara

Cards (63)

  • What is a compound microscope?
    A microscope with multiple magnifying lenses
  • How much can a compound microscope magnify objects?
    Approximately a thousand times their original size
  • What is the main source of illumination for a compound microscope?
    Visible light
  • What is another name for the compound microscope?
    Compound light microscope
  • How many magnifying lens systems does a compound microscope have?
    Two magnifying lens systems
  • What is the magnifying power of the ocular lens in a compound microscope?
    10x
  • Where is the objective lens located in a compound microscope?
    Above the organism to be viewed
  • What are the main components of a compound microscope?
    • Ocular lens (eyepiece)
    • Revolving nosepiece
    • Diopter adjustment
    • Body tube (head)
    • Arm
    • Coarse adjustment
    • Fine adjustment
    • Objective lenses
    • Stage
    • Stage clips
    • Stage control
    • Aperture
    • On/off switch
    • Illuminator
    • Iris diaphragm
    • Condenser
    • Base
  • What is the function of the ocular lens in a microscope?
    It allows the viewer to see the specimen
  • What does the revolving nosepiece do?
    Holds the objective lenses
  • What is the purpose of the diopter adjustment?
    To correct vision differences between eyes
  • What connects the eyepiece to the objective lenses?
    Body tube or head
  • What does the arm of the microscope do?
    Connects the body tube to the base
  • What is the function of the coarse adjustment?
    Brings the specimen into general focus
  • What does the fine adjustment do?
    Increases the details of the specimen
  • Where are the objective lenses located?
    Above the stage, closest to the specimen
  • How many objective lenses does a compound microscope typically have?
    3 to 5 objectives
  • What is the stage of a microscope?
    The flat platform for the specimen
  • What are stage clips used for?
    To hold the slide in place
  • What does the stage control do?
    Moves the stage left/right or forward/backward
  • What is the purpose of the aperture in a microscope?
    Allows light to reach the slide
  • Where is the on/off switch located on a microscope?
    At the base of the microscope
  • What is the illuminator in a microscope?
    The light source of the microscope
  • What does the iris diaphragm do?
    Adjusts the amount of light through the condenser
  • What is the function of the condenser?
    Focuses light onto the specimen
  • What does the base of the microscope do?
    Supports the microscope and houses the illuminator
  • What is a brightfield microscope?
    A microscope using visible light for illumination
  • How much can a brightfield microscope magnify an object?
    1,000 to 1,500 times
  • What types of specimens are visualized with a brightfield microscope?
    Bacteria and fungi
  • What is the limitation of a brightfield microscope?
    Cannot visualize objects less than 0.2 µm
  • Why is it called a brightfield microscope?
    Specimens appear dark against a bright field
  • What is a drawback of the brightfield microscope?
    Very low contrast; staining is often needed
  • What is a darkfield microscope?
    A microscope using reflected light for illumination
  • How does a darkfield microscope illuminate specimens?
    Specimens appear bright against a dark background
  • What type of specimens is a darkfield microscope ideal for?
    Unstained or transparent specimens
  • What external details can a darkfield microscope examine?
    Outline or surface of the specimen
  • What type of organisms can be viewed with a darkfield microscope?
    Spirochetes
  • What principle does phase-contrast microscopy rely on?
    Differences in refractive indices and light waves
  • Who introduced phase-contrast microscopy?
    Frits Zernike
  • What is the purpose of phase-contrast microscopy?
    To produce high-contrast images of transparent specimens