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Ch 7 – The Microscope

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Ch 7 The Microscope Compound microscope. Magnification, field of view, working distance, and depth of focus. Comparison microscope. Advantages of stereoscopic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch 7 – The Microscope


1
Ch 7 The Microscope
  • Compound microscope.
  • Magnification, field of view, working distance,
    and depth of focus.
  • Comparison microscope.
  • Advantages of stereoscopic microscope.
  • Plane-polarized light and polarizing microscope.
  • Advantages of linking a microscope to a
    spectrophotometer.

2
  • Utilizing a microspectrophotometer for examining
    trace physical evidence.
  • Mechanism of image formation for light microscope
    Vs scanning electron microscope (SEM).
  • Advantages and applications of SEM in forensic
    science.

3
  • Virtual image an image cannot be seen directly.
    It can only be seen by a viewer looking through
    a lens.
  •  
  • Real image an image formed by the actual
    convergence of light rays upon a screen
  •  Objective lens the lower lens of a microscope
    that is positioned directly over the specimen
  •  Eyepiece lens the lens of a microscope into
    which the viewer looks same as the ocular lens

4
  • Transmitted illumination light that passes up
    from the condenser and though the specimen
  •  
  • Vertical or reflected illumination illumination
    of a specimen from above in microscopy it is
    used to examine opaque specimens
  •  Condenser lens system located under the
    microscope stage that focuses light onto the
    specimen

5
  • Parfocal construction of a microscope such that
    when an image is focused with one objective in
    position, the other objective can be rotated into
    place and the field will remain in focus
  •  Monocular a microscope with one eyepiece
  •  Binocular a microscope with two eyepieces
  •  Field of view the area of the specimen that
    can be seen after it is magnified

6
  • Depth of Focus the thickness of a specimen
    entirely in focus under a microscope
  •  
  • Plane-Polarized light light confined to a
    single place of vibration
  •  Polarizer a device that permits the passage of
    light waves vibrating in only one plane
  •  Microspectrophotometer an instrument that
    links a microscope to a spectrometer

7
Compound Microscope
8
Comparison Microscope
9
Polarizing Microscope
10
Stereoscopic Microscope
Cell division in a frog's egg.
11
Microspectrophotometer
12
Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
13
SEM Data
Nanoscaled polyimide structures
Side-wall morphology of solar cell gridline
14
Ch. 7 - Microscopy
  • Viewing small Specimens

15
The Microscope
  • Provides a direct image of a small object of
    interest
  • spectroscopy gives an abstract representation
    which must be interpreted on the basis of a model
    or some assumptions
  • A typical animal cell is 10-20 nm in diameter
  • 5x smaller than the smallest object that can be
    seen directly by the naked eye

16
The Microscope
  • Produce a magnified image of a specimen
  • Separate the details in the image
  • Render the details visible to the human eye or
    camera

17
Lenses
  • Refraction of a light ray as it passes through a
    prism

18
Lenses
  • Light passing through two identical prisms
    stacked base to base would intersect at point I
  • produce a real image
  • converging lens

19
Focal Point Focal Length
  • The point at which parallel rays are converged to
    an image is the focal point of the lens
  • The distance of this point from the lens is the
    focal length

20
Simple Magnifier
  • Object O is placed close to the lens
  • rays converge but do not intersect
  • real image not formed
  • The observers eye follows rays back to the point
    of apparent origin (I)
  • I bigger than object

21
The Compound Microscope
  • Rays pass first through the objective lens
    forming a real, slightly enlarged, inverted image
  • The second lens (eyepiece) acts as a simple
    magnifier

22
Compound Microscope
  • Both lenses produce magnification
  • Overall magnification is found by multiplying the
    two magnifications
  • Magnification determined mainly by objective

23
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24
The Comparison Microscope
  • Two compound microscopes combined into one unit
  • When viewer looks through the eyepiece, a field
    divided into two equal parts is observed
  • specimen on left scope on left side of field
  • specimen on right scope on right side of field

25
The Comparison Microscope
  • Bullet comparisons
  • Hair Fiber comparisons
  • Questioned documents

26
Test Fire Reference Gun
27
Use A Comparison Microscope
28
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29
Striations match
30
Stereoscopic Microscope
  • Two separate monocular microscopes
  • Each has its own set of lenses

31
Stereoscopic Microscope
Using the Stereo Microscope
Using the Compound Microscope
32
FT-IR Microspectrophotometer
33
Photocopier Toner Analysis
  • important for establishing corroborative evidence
    linking documents to specific locations in
    forensic investigations of corporate crime
  • Must be performed non-destructively
  • cant remove toner from paper
  • physical size of specimen is very small
  • microscope to find sample
  • FT-IR to analyze the sample

34
Photocopier Toner Analysis
35
Limitations of Light Microscope
  • Radiation of a given wavelength cant be used to
    probe structural details much smaller than its
    own wavelength
  • Light Microscope
  • limited to range of visible light
  • 0.4 mm (violet) to 0.7 mm (deep red)
  • bacteria nitochondria (0.5mm wide) smallest
    objects that can be seen clearly

36
Range of Readily Resolvable Objects
37
Scanning Electron Microscope
  • This scanning electron microscope has a
    magnification range from 15x to 200,000x and a
    resolution of 5 nanometers

38
How the SEM Works
39
Conventional light microscopes use a series of
glass lenses to bend light waves and create a
magnified image.
40
  • The Scanning Electron Microscope creates the
    magnified images by using electrons instead of
    light waves

41
The SEM shows very detailed 3-dimensional images
at much higher magnifications than is possible
with a light microscope. The images created
without light waves are rendered black and white
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Samples have to be prepared carefully to
withstand the vacuum inside the microscope
48
  • Biological specimens are dried in a special
    manner that prevents them from shriveling.
  • Because the SEM illuminates them with electrons,
    they also have to be made to conduct electricity

49
  • How do you make a mosquito conductive?
  • SEM samples are coated with a very thin layer of
    gold by a machine called a sputter coater

50
The specimen is now prepared
51
The sample is placed inside the microscope's
vacuum column through an air-tight door
52
  • Air is pumped out of the column
  • An electron gun at the top emits a beam of high
    energy electrons.
  • travels downward through a series of magnetic
    lenses designed to focus the electrons to a very
    fine spot

53
  • Near the bottom, a set of scanning coils moves
    the focused beam back and forth across the
    specimen, row by row

54
  • As the electron beam hits each spot on the
    sample, secondary electrons are knocked loose
    from its surface.
  • A detector counts these electrons and sends the
    signals to an amplifier

55
  • The final image is built up from the number of
    electrons emitted from each spot on the sample

56
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Fiber Analysis
59
Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Analysis (EDX)
  • Electron beam 5,000-20,000eV
  • Atomic electrons are dislodged ionizing the
    sample
  • Resulting electron vacancy filled by an electron
    from a ghigher shell
  • X-ray is produced
  • x-ray energy characteristic of the parent atom

60
Gunshot Residue by EDX
  • Residue particle from the hand of a person who
    fired a .380 Browning automatic
  • The peaks of lead, barium antimony together
    with the shape of the particle are quite specific
    show that the subject had fired a weapon

61
Who am I?
  • Im a louse fly of a wallglider (an alpine bird)
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