When a very close view of the specimen is necessary. You can focus in on one part of the specimen.
gneiss is the answer
yes
There is no single temperature. It depends on the nature of the specimen.
the specimen is the objective the microscope and a parts of microscope
Heat fixed; because it kills the bacteria,firmly affix the smear to the microscope slide, and allow the sample to more readily take up the stain.
What is the specimen?
A specimen should be on the top surface of the slide and place a cover-slip over it.
As much as necessary.
Because it will change shape as it dries, so mounting it while it is wet would cause excessive stresses.
When a very close view of the specimen is necessary. You can focus in on one part of the specimen.
When you are at the doctors office.
gneiss is the answer
A specimen being viewed under a microscope should be thin so that light can pass through the specimen. The thinner it is the brighter it will be. A thick specimen will block the light and all you'll get is a dark grey image. Also, more detail can be seen in a thin specimen because there will not be parts in front of each other, blocking the view.
Put the specimen in the bottle.I brought back a specimen of English money.They put the bullet in a specimen bag.
he should get fixed
fixed assets