a water hose
so the slide can slide on and off smooth.
the five steps to making a wet mount slide is 1.use a flat glass slide to prepare a wt mount slide 2.suck up a few drops of water from your liquid specimen into a medicaine dropper 3.pick up the wet mount slide on the 2 outer sides of the slides 4.place the specimen your using into the water 5.place the top cover slips on the top of the water with the specimen in it (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (:
slide? your obviously doing something for cyberschool and you need to use the slide viewer =P ^ Retard... Slide referring to the slide under the microscope. And the answer would be the inner and outermembrane.
Using a sterile cotton swab, gently remove some of the exudate from the dog's ear. Place the exudate on a glass microscope slide and, pressing firmly, smear the exudate across the slide. Use an open flame source (hand-held flick-style cigarette lighters work well) and gently head the underside of the slide to attach the exudate to the slide. Stain the slide with standard Gram stain following the manufacturer's directions. Rinse the slide gentle with tap water and then place on the microscope for viewing.
a) the object is placed in a drop of water (or saline) on a clean slide. b) a coverslip is held at a 45o angle with the fingertips, and c) it is lowered carefully over the water and the object.
What instrumentProbably a microscope.
Magnifying / Microscope lens
Magnifying / Microscope lens
so the slide can slide on and off smooth.
it is use to hold your glass slide/specimen slide in place.
it is use to place an item on and put it under a microscope to view
the five steps to making a wet mount slide is 1.use a flat glass slide to prepare a wt mount slide 2.suck up a few drops of water from your liquid specimen into a medicaine dropper 3.pick up the wet mount slide on the 2 outer sides of the slides 4.place the specimen your using into the water 5.place the top cover slips on the top of the water with the specimen in it (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (: (:
Stage Clips.
Most professionals do not use slide oil, but instead use a two-part liquid called Slide-o-Mix (costs about $16), followed by a squirt of plain water. It makes your slide move smoother, it lasts longer, doesn't smell bad, and doesn't leave the oily residue. That $16 bottle of magic is $2 worth of cold creme which you could use with a water spray.
Microscopes use light to illuminate the stage where you place a slide for viewing. Without this light, you would be unable to see much of anything.
yes... use a tampon
Apply a liberal amount of cream to the slide, then spread it around by moving your slide up and down. Apply a thin coating of water to the slide, and you're good to go. Make sure not to use too much slide cream.