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The stage
compound light microscope
A steady light source used in place of a mirror. it is used to reflect light from an external light source up through the bottom of the stage
A microscope.
A mirror or light bulb. It is located below the stage and shines up through the slide.
A diaphragm regulates the amount of light entering the microscope. Stage opening allows light to pass through the stage of the microscope.
it's the STAGE
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The stage
what part of the microscope is tobe adjusted so that the greatest amount of light will pass through the stage
compound light microscope (light passes through the specimen and produces a flat image)
The answer to this microscope question is the stage opening.
The light in a room is captured on some models of microscopes by a mirror. The light passes through the stage opening and illuminates the specimen on the slide. The light is then focused by an array of lenses before exiting the eyepiece. Some models of microscopes use a light called an in base illuminator in place of a mirror that shines a bright toward the microscope's stage opening.
A stage aperture is the opening on a microscope slide that allows light to pass through to the specimen.
The mirror arm is mounted below the microscope's stage, and can be turned this way and that to reflect light up through the stage and into the microscope barrel, to your eye. Without the mirror, you would see nothing or not much.
You can have a source of light underneath the stage, that will shine through the hole and illuminate the subject that you are looking at.
The stage in a microscope holds the specimen, usually on a slide, and has an opening in it to permit light to come up through the stage and through the specimen and further on up to the optics.