He did not. The Microscope was invented by Leuwenhoek, a Dutch Lens Grinder in the mid l7Th century in Delftt, a humorous poem was written about it. the original model used compound lenses and had a high magnification of 300 X. Robert Hooke may have made improvements on microscopes, as a hobby manufacturer implied with a kit of Hooke"s microscope circa l962, but he did not Invent the instrument.
Robert Hooke looked at a piece of dead cork under the microscope because king Charles II asked him to.
POO!
His Microscope Was Made Of: Three Lenses, one near the object, another at the top, the third inside the barrel. I think so anyway.
he looked at microbes and animal and plant cells
he used a light mircoscope in 1665 when he first discovered cells
1.Eyepiece
2.Barrel
3.Focusing Screw
4.Objective
5.Specimen Holder
6.Water Flask
7.Oil Lamp
Three Lenses.
he looked at a piece of cork
Robert hooke developed the microscope
Robert Hooke looked at plant cells which looked like a place where monks sleep.
When Hooke first looked through his mircoscope he broke of a tiny part of cork and found that it was not a solid object but was composed of numerous tiny cavities. They tiny cavities had small cells which made Robert Hook think of the rows of bare rooms or cells in which the monks lived in a monastery, He named what he saw "opening cells"
Okay well I dont know so dont really ask me. I am 31 years old and I need to know about it. I know that it was invented in 1665. and that the inventor is Robert Hooke. Sorry look on another website for this answer.
Robert Hooke was the English scientist and inventor who wrote the 1665 book 'Micrographia', in which he coined the term "cell" for a basic biological structure. He also invented a reflecting microscope, the universal joint, and a variety of clocks, and optical devices. Hooke was one of the first to recognize a double star; and he also proposed a wave theory of light. He lectured on comets and earthquakes, and noted the relationship between a falling barometer and an approaching storm. After the great fire of London in 1666, he was engaged by the city in rebuilding projects and proved himself to be a skilled architect as well.
The microscope can become an extension of your sense of vision because, when you look through it, it lets you see very small things close up.
When you want to look at things you couldn't with a light microscope.
He first looked through a microscope in 1665
Robert Hooke was the first person to look at cells through a microscope!
Robert Hooke.
Robert hooke
Cells
these something u would have to look up for yourself He thought the spaces looked like monks' rooms in a monastery, so he called them "cells".
Robert Hooke
Robert hooke
Robert Hooke.
nobody knows i looked for years i loked for mevdince but coldn't fuine
Hooke looked at a slice of cork and saw that it look like a cell where monks and nuns used to sleep.
Robert Hooke looked at cork cells through his crude microscope. In fact he was the one who coined the term cell, as he said the cork cells reminded him of the cells where monks lived.