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AIM: To study the various types of Microscopy THEORY: Microscope is the most commonly used piece of apparatus in the laboratory. It produces greatly enlarged images of minute objects. LIGHT MICROSCOPE A Light Microscope can be simple or a compound microscope. [A] SIMPLE MICROSCOPE This is a simple hand magnifying lens. The magnification power of hand lens is from 2x to 200x. [B] COMPOUND MICROSCOPE This has a battery of lenses which are fitted in a complex instrument. One type of lens remain near the object (objective lens) and another type of lens near the observer’s eye ( eye piece lens). The eye piece and objective lenses have different magnification. The compound microscope can be monocular having single eye piece or, binocular which has two eye pieces. The usual type of microscope used in clinical laboratories is called light microscope. A compound microscope has the following parts: ▪ Stand ▪ Body ▪ Optical system ▪ Light/ Illumination system 1. Stand This is Horse-shoe shaped in monocular microscope. It gives stability to the microscope. Binocular microscopes have a variety of ergonomic shapes of stand. 2. Body It consists of limb which arises from the joint with which microscope can be moved in comfortable position. The stand and limb carry the following: i. Body tubes ii. Stage iii. Knobs for coarse and fine adjustment Body Tubes There are two tubes: external tube which carries at its lower end a revolving nose piece having objective lenses of different magnification while internal tube is draw tube which carries at its upper end eye pieces. Stage This is a metallic platform which accommodates glass slide having mounted object over it to be seen. Stage is attached to the limb just below the level of objectives. It has an aperture in its centre which permits the light to reach the object. Slide on the stage can be moved horizontally or vertically by two knobs attached to slide holder. Just below the stage is substage which consists of condenser through which light is focused on the object. The substage can be moved up or down. The substage has an iris diaphragm, closing and opening of which controls the amount of light reaching the object. Knobs for Coarse and Fine Adjustments For coarse and fine adjustments, knobs are provided on either side of the body. Coarse adjustment has two bigger knobs, the movement of which moves the body tubes with its lenses. Fine adjustment has two smaller knobs either side of the body. The fine focus is graduated and by each division objective moves by 0.002 mm. 3. Optical System Optical System is comprised by different lenses which are fitted into a microscope. It consists of eye piece, objectives and condensers. Eye piece In monocular microscope, there is one eye piece while binocular microscope has two. Eye piece has two plano-convex lenses. Their magnification can be 5x, 10x, or 15x. Objective These are made of a battery of lenses with prisms incorporated in them. Their magnification power is 4x, 10x, 40x and 100x. Condenser This is made up of two simple lenses and it condenses light on to the object. 4. Light/ Illumination system For day light illumination, a mirror is fitted which is plane on one side and concave on the other side. Plane mirror is used in sunlight while concave in artificial light. Currently, most of the microscopes have in-built electrical illumination varying from 20 to 100 watts. MAGNIFICATION AND RESOLVING POWER OF LIGHT MICROSCOPE Magnification power of the microscope is the degree of image enlargement. It depends upon the following: • Length of optical tube • Magnifying power of objective • Magnifying power of eye piece With a fixed tube length of 160 mm in majority of standard microscopes, the magnification power of the microscope is obtained by the following: Magnifying power of objective x Magnifying power of eye piece . Resolving power represents the capacity of the optical system to produce separate images of objects very close to each other. Resolving power (R) = 0.61 λ NA Where λ is wavelength of incidental light; and NA is Numerical aperture of lens Resolving power of a standard light microscope is around 200nm. HOW TO USE A LIGHT MICROSCOPE 1. The microscope must be kept in a comfortable position. 2. Appropriate illumination is obtained by adjusting the mirror or intensity of light. 3. When examining colorless objects, the condenser should be at the lowest position and iris diaphragm closed or partially closed. 4. When using oil immersion, 100x objectives should dip in oil. 5. After using oil immersion clean the lens of the objective should be cleaned with tissue paper or soft cloth. OTHER TYPES OF MICROSCOPY DARK GROUND ILLUMINATION (DGI) This method is used for examination of unstained living micro-organisms e.g. Treponema pallidum. Principle The micro-organisms are illuminated by an oblique ray of light which does not pass through the micro-organism. The condenser is blackened in the centre and light passes through its periphery illuminating the living micro- organism on a glass slide. POLARISING MICROSCOPE This method is used for demonstration of birefringence e.g. amyloid, foreign body, hair etc. Principle The light is made plane polarized. Two discs made up of prism are placed in the path of light, one below the object known as polarizer and another placed in the body tube which is known as analyzer. Polarizer sieves out ordinary light rays vibrating in all directions allowing light waves of one orientation to pass through. The lower disc (polarizer) is rotated to make the light plane polarized. During rotation, when analyzer comes perpendicular to polarizer, all light rays are canceled or extinguished. Birefringent objects rotate the light rays and therefore appear bright in a dark background.
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