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1) When you pick up the microscope and walk with it, hold it with two hands. Use one to hold the arm and one to hold the base. 2) Always make sure your on the lowest magnification when using it and that the stage is all the way down 3) use a chem wipe to clean everything off.. dont worry too much about the microscope slides.. if its just a plain slide they are usually not too expensive 4) Move slowly and you'll be fine.. doing everything slowly also helps the experiment run better
Work done is equal to Force multiplied by distance:Wd = FxdWd = 324x3Work done = 972 Joules.
Repeat the procedure at least twice, preferably 3 times. Only keep 1 thing in your experiment the same. Change the materials or anything you are using.
1.hold the microscope two hands one on the arm/ handle and the one is in the base of the microscope 2. Store the device in a clean dry box or cabinet, usually with some kind of plastic dust cover. 3. When using the High-Power objective lens, be very careful when focusing not to drive the head of the lens into the cover-slip or slide. Always visually adjust the head of the lens about 1 mm or so above the cover-slip, then looking through the eye-piece, use the "fine" focus control to bring the sample into sharp focus. 4. Always replace damaged parts and components with manufacture recommended replacements. If you must use other manufacture's parts, be sure they have the right specifications for your particular microscope. 5. When moving your microscope from place to place in the lab, use one hand to grip the microscope while supporting it at the base with your other hand. This keeps accidents and the lost of parts to a minimum. 6. Don't leave slide, sample, and cover-slip on the microscope stage for extended periods of time, and when through viewing, raise the objective lens away from the cover-slip and turn the objectives to the lowest power objective len setting. Remove the slide and put the microscope away. 7. If the microscope uses a light bulb as its light source, turn the power off when the microscope isn't actually in use. 8. Cleaning the eye-piece and objective lens, aways follow the manufacture's recommendations and instructions.
Step 1: Put the specimens in the glass Step 2: Put it on the stage Step 3: Look at the eyepiece Step 4:You can manipulate the microsope!!!!
Use the (-4,0) thing, then make it bigger by using the 3 thing, then move it to the side using the (4,0) thing then make it smaller by using the 1/3 thing.
That depends on the type of microscope you are using, so check the lab you work or go to school in. At my lab, our microscopes have 4x, 10x, 40x, 100x magnification lenses.
1.digital microscope 2.stereo microscope 3.compound microscope 4.electron microscope 5.laboratory microscope
It could be done by: (3*3)/(3*3) = 1
The 3 major parts of microscope are illuminating, magnifying & mechanical .
there are 3 or more objectives in a compound microscope
It is done by using Roman numerals: VI = 6
some thing that is done over and over again <3 :)
Light microscope: 1. Uses a beam of light that is focused using glass lenses. 2. Magnification is moderate -- not as much as electron microscope 3. Produces a color image since it uses light 4. Can look directly at the specimen with our eyes Electron microscope 1. Uses a beam of electrons that is focused using magnets. 2. Magnification can be extremely high and show details that are not possible with the light microscope 3. Produces a grey-scale image because color requires visible light 4. Image must be seen on a monitor or in a photograph because we don't see electrons.
SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope)
A light microscope is an optical microscope. That differentiates it from an electron microscope, a quantum mechanical tunneling microscope and others.
It cannot be done using real numbers. However, it can be done using complex numbers: 16y² + 4y + 1 = ¼(8y + (1 + i√3))(8y + (1 - i√3))