A glass slide: coverslip
a SPECIMEN
Yes - but a specimen can be something that is not observed under a microscope as well. For example, if you ever went on a walk in the country, picked a wildflower that grew there, and brought it home, you would have a specimen of a native plant that grew in the area where you found it.
specimen observed
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It is inverted .
== == You put a specimen on a glass plate and then view the specimen under a microscope. It acts sort of like a slide.
a SPECIMEN
to stain.
Yes - but a specimen can be something that is not observed under a microscope as well. For example, if you ever went on a walk in the country, picked a wildflower that grew there, and brought it home, you would have a specimen of a native plant that grew in the area where you found it.
The scientist examined the specimen under the microscope.
specimen observed
The lamp under the glass slid of the microscope is called the "bulb" lol. just kidding. i have no idea.
A microscope magnifies or enlarges the specimen 100 times from its actual size with clarity. With this, it will be easier to build character on the specimen that is under study.
A cover slip is a small, and extremely thin piece of glass used in the operation of a microscope. The cover slip is placed on top of the specimen which is then placed under the microscope. The function of the cover slip is that it keeps the specimen in place while you examine it.
It is called a diaphram.
the same way as under low-power on a microscope: carefully
a piece of cork