to generate light, so the specimen can be examined (sends light through base, diaphragm, stage specimen, slide, objective lens, nose-piece, body, body tube, and eyepiece)
Objects viewed through a light microscope look a lot bigger.
YES
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The answer to this microscope question is the stage opening.
a light microscope uses a lamp underr the microscope and an electron microscope sends a beam of electrons down to act like a magnet to suppl light to the object.
to generate light, so the specimen can be examined (sends light through base, diaphragm, stage specimen, slide, objective lens, nose-piece, body, body tube, and eyepiece)
Objects viewed through a light microscope look a lot bigger.
A diaphragm regulates the amount of light entering the microscope. Stage opening allows light to pass through the stage of the microscope.
Eukaryotic flagella are visible through a light microscope. Bacterial flagella are only visible with a light microscope if they are specially stained with a mordant and a flagella stain.
If your microscope is a Transmission Microscope then light has to pass through the specimen (that is how the microscope works).Other kinds of microscopes may not require this.
No, you need a florescent microscope to see that.
no it's usless to measure it the microscope
A Light stereoscope microscope; this type of microscope is used to see three dimensional views of objects too thick to let light pass through.
YES
The cytoplasm is somewhat clear when looking through a light microscope. However you can see where the cytoplasm is. You can see cell walls and cell membranes through a light microscope, the spaces in between these lines is cytoplasm.
compound light microscope (light passes through the specimen and produces a flat image)