Have poorresolution due to the wavelength of light used to create the image, but can use living samples and get colour images
Transmission electron microscopes
Have much higher magnification and resolution, using electrons passing through the specimen to create the image
Scanning electron microscopes
Similar to transmission electron microscopes, but the electrons bounce off the surface to create a 3D image
Resolution
The minimum distance between two objects where they can still be viewed as separate
Magnification
How many times larger the image is compared to the actual object
Slide preparation types
Dry mount
Wet mount
Squash slide
Smear slide
Eyepiece graticule
A scale inside the eyepiece of a microscope that can be used to measure the size of objects
Calibrating the eyepiece graticule
1. Align it with a stage micrometer
2. Count how many eyepiecedivisions fit in one stage micrometer division
3. Calculate the value of one eyepiece division
Magnification calculation

Size of image / Size of realobject
Staining
Adding dyes to make cell components more visible under the microscope
Differential staining

Using multiplestains to colour differentcellcomponents different colours
Gram staining
A differential staining technique used to identify whether bacteria are gram-positive or gram-negative
Scientific drawings
Accurate, labelled diagrams showing the size, shape, and location of structures, without any sketching, shading or colouring
Transmission electron microscopes
Use a beam of electrons that pass through a very thinspecimen to create a 2D image
Scanning electron microscopes
Use a beam of electrons that bounce off the surface of the specimen to create a 3D image
Eukaryotic cell organelles
Nucleus
Flagella
Cilia
Centrioles
Cytoskeleton
Endoplasmic reticulum
Golgiapparatus
Mitochondria
Lysosomes
Peroxisomes
Vacuoles
Chloroplasts
Ribosomes
Nucleus
Contains the genetic material, site of DNA replication and transcription
Flagella and cilia
Provide mobility and sensory functions
Centrioles
Involved in spindle fibre formation during cell division
Cytoskeleton
Provides mechanicalstrength, shape and stability to the cell
Endoplasmic reticulum
RoughER is the site of protein synthesis, smoothER is the site of lipid and carbohydrate synthesis
Golgi apparatus
Modifies, packages and distributesproteins and other molecules produced in the ER
Mitochondria
Site of cellular respiration and ATP production
Lysosomes
Contain digestiveenzymes to break down waste and foreign material
Peroxisomes
Involved in oxidation of fatty acids and detoxification
Vacuoles
Storage and transport of materials in plant cells
Chloroplasts
Site of photosynthesis in plant cells
Ribosomes
Site of protein synthesis
Rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER)

Site of protein synthesis because they have ribosomes on the outside, proteins can also be folded here
Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER)

Site of synthesis of lipids and carbohydrates, can also be used for storage
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)

Smooth folded membranes
Rough membranes have ribosomes attached
Golgi apparatus
Foldedmembranes that form cisternae, vesicles bud off the edges, proteins are processed and packaged, carbohydrates added to proteins, secretoryenzymes made, lipidsmodified and stored, molecules labelled with destination
Lysosomes
Vesicles containing digestive enzymes, can fuse with phagosomes to hydrolyse and destroy pathogens, involved in breaking down dead cells, contents released by fusion with cell membrane
Mitochondria
Doublemembrane-bound organelle
Inner membrane folds to form cristae
Contains mitochondrialmatrix, site of aerobic respiration and ATP production
Contains own ribosomes and DNA
Ribosomes
Small, made of protein and RNA subunits, 80S in eukaryotes, 70S in prokaryotes and organelles, site of protein synthesis
Chloroplasts
Doublemembrane-bound organelle
Thylakoid membranes stacked into grana
Contains fluidstroma with enzymes for photosynthesis
Cell walls

Found in plant and fungal cells, provide structural strength, made of cellulosemicrofibrils in plants, chitin in fungi
Plasma membrane
Phospholipid bilayer with embeddedproteins, controls what enters and exits the cell
Protein production and secretion
1. Polypeptide chains synthesised on ribosomes of roughER
2. Polypeptides move to ERlumen and are folded and packaged into vesicles
3. Vesicles transported to Golgiapparatus for further modification
4. Proteins packaged into secretoryvesicles
5. Vesicles fuse with cell membrane and release proteins by exocytosis
Prokaryotic cells
Smaller, no membrane-bound organelles, circular DNA not in nucleus, 70S ribosomes, cell wall made of murein, some have plasmids, capsule, flagella