It's called a slide.
It's called a slide.
== == You put a specimen on a glass plate and then view the specimen under a microscope. It acts sort of like a slide.
If you are referring to the old trick where you put a piece of paper over a glass and turn it upside down, the answer is water tension.
You fill the glass up.
If it is a thin, small piece of copper put it in water with soap and I think it will float Copper will float in Mercury. Copper will float in Uranium Hexafluoride but good luck getting your hands on any of that.
It's called a slide.
To examine it under the microscope, the specimen needs to be illuminated by either a light underneath or a stream of electrons. If the specimen is too thick, and light or electrons cannot penetrate it, the scientist will be unable to see any detail.
A cover slip is a thin square of glass that you put over a specimen on a microscope slide. The cover slip stops the specimen from drying out, and squishes it so that light can get though it easier
A cover slip is a thin square of glass that you put over a specimen on a microscope slide. The cover slip stops the specimen from drying out, and squishes it so that light can get though it easier
A glass slide: coverslip
== == You put a specimen on a glass plate and then view the specimen under a microscope. It acts sort of like a slide.
A microscope slide is the commonest instrument in any Biology laboratory. It is a transparent rectangular glass apparatus and it fits underneath the lens piece of the microscope. It is used for mounting smears of body secretions, microscopic specimen of bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites. One can stain the specimen they want to observe and focus the microscope on it. A cover slip is placed on top of the slide in order to keep the specimen in place. One can use a microscope slide in order to draw blood films as well.
A cover slip is a thin square of glass that you put over a specimen on a microscope slide. The cover slip stops the specimen from drying out, and squishes it so that light can get though it easier
Center the slide on the stage. Looking from the side, decrease the distance between the slide and the objective lens until the lens comes to a stop. Looking throught the ocukar lens(es), use the coarse-adjustment knob to increase the distance between the slide and the lens until the object comes into view.
The piece of glass went ineffectively into her skin. I think that's how....
Put the specimen in the bottle.I brought back a specimen of English money.They put the bullet in a specimen bag.
Slide.