Title: MICROSCOPE
1MICROSCOPE
- The microscope may have been invented by eyeglass
makers in Middelburg, The Netherlands, invented
sometime between 1590 and 1610.
2- Hans and his son Zacharias Janssen are mentioned
in the letters of William Boreel ( the Dutch
envoy to the Court of France) as having invented
a 20X magnification microscope.
3 4- Robert Hooke used an early microscope to observe
slices of cork (bark from the oak tree) using a
30X power compound microscope. He published his
observations in "Microgphia" in 1665. He came up
with the term cell to describe each unit of the
cork.
5- Robert Hooke, 1635-1703, English Chemist,
Mathematician, Physicist, and Inventor
6Robert Hookes Observations
7- In 1673, Antony van Leeuwenhoek discovered
bacteria, free-living and parasitic microscopic
protists, sperm cells, blood cells, etc., using a
300X power single lens microscope
8Anton van Leeuwenhoek, 1632-1723, Wine Assayer,
Surveyor, Cloth Merchant, Minor Public Official,
and Inventor
9Diagram Showing Light Traveling Through The
Microscope
10 11http//www.mos.org/sln/sem/tour01.html
12Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
- SEM use electron illumination. The image is seen
in 3-D. It has high magnification and high
resolution. The specimen is coated in gold and
the electrons bounce off to give you and exterior
view of the specimen. The pictures are in black
and white.
13Mosquito - SEM
14Transmission Electron Microscope
- TEM is electron illuminated. This gives a 2-D
view. Thin slices of specimen are obtained. The
electron beams pass through this. It has high
magnification and high resolution
15Structures within Plant Cell - TEM
16 17 18- 1. Clean lenses and slides with lens paper.
Keep a package by your microscope. - 2. Start with the scanning-power objective lens.
Make sure its clicked in place. - 3. Start with 5 for your diaphragm. Make sure
its clicked in place - 4. Make sure you have plugged in to an outlet
and turn your light source on.
19- 5. Raise the stage a substantial amount. Look
into the eyepiece. - 6. Look for the edge of the coverslip.
20Microscope Parts and Functions
- arm - this attaches the eyepiece and body tube to
the base. - base - this supports the microscope.
- body tube - the tube that supports the eyepiece.
21- coarse focus adjustment - a knob that makes large
adjustments to the focus. - diaphragm - an adjustable opening under the
stage, allowing different amounts of light onto
the stage. - eyepiece - where you place your eye.
22- fine focus adjustment - a knob that makes small
adjustments to the focus (it is often smaller
than the coarse focus knob - high-power objective - a large lens with high
magnifying power.
23- inclination joint - an adjustable joint that lets
the arm tilt at various angles. - low-power objective - a small lens with low
magnifying power
24- mirror (or light source) - this directs light
upwards onto the slide. - revolving nosepiece - the rotating device that
holds the objectives (lenses).
25- stage - the platform on which a slide is placed.
- stage clips - metal clips that hold a slide
securely onto the stage.
26 27 28Elodea 40X
29Elodea 100X
30Elodea 400X
31Microscope Review
- http//www.southwestschools.org/jsfaculty/Microsco
pes/Magnification.html
32The Science of Life
- Biology is the study of living things or the
science of life - Organisms are living things whether unicellular
(one-celled)or multicellular (many cells)
33Chroococcaceae a type of cyanobacteria
34Euglena tripteris a photosynthetic protist
35- Multicellular organisms have cells that have
differentiated. They look different and do
different jobs.
36Rotifera
37Parabuthus granulatus
38Unifying biological themes
- Cell structure and function
- Stability and homeostasis
- Reproduction and inheritance
- Evolution
39- Interdependence of organisms
- Matter, energy, and organization
40Cell Theory
- Cell is the basic unit of structure and function
of living things. - All organisms are made of cells.
- All organisms come from existing cells.
41Stability and Homeostasis
- Homeostasis is the stable internal conditions of
an organism - Ex Body temperature of an endotherm
(warm-blooded organism) - pH, insulin levels
42Reproduction and Inheritance
- Reproduction - organisms producing new organisms
of the same species - Sexual reproduction - process in which two
cells, normally from different individuals, unite
to produce the first cell of a new organism
43- Asexual reproduction process in which a single
organism produces a new organism or organisms
identical to itself