The flat microscope platform is on which an object is placed for viewing is called the stage.
A stage is where you place a slide for viewing through an optical microscope and it is where a performance takes place in a theatre.
Typically, a coverslip is placed on the specimen on a wet mount slide before viewing with a light source. The coverslip helps to prevent evaporation of the water, keeps the specimen in place, and provides a flat surface for better visualization under the microscope.
Stage and Stage Clips The stage is a platform for the slides, which hold the specimen. The stage typically has a stage clip on either side to hold the slide firmly in place. Some microscopes have a mechanical stage, with adjustment knobs that allow for more precise positioning of slides.
You are describing a compound light microscope. It magnifies objects through a combination of lenses (ocular and objective) and has a stage where the specimen is placed for viewing.
Objects that are viewed through a microscope are typically placed on a glass slide, which provides a flat and stable surface for the object to be observed. The slide is usually covered with a thin glass coverslip to protect the specimen and hold it in place while allowing light to pass through for magnification.
The microscope stage is the platform on which a slide is placed for viewing.
The platform that holds a specimen on a microscope is called a stage. It is where the specimen is placed for viewing and analysis under the microscope. The stage can be moved horizontally and vertically to adjust the position of the specimen for better viewing.
The slide is placed on the stage.
The stage holds the slide in place on a microscope. It is the platform where the slide is placed for viewing under the objective lenses.
The name for a part of theatre and a part of a microscope is "stage." In theatre, the stage is where actors perform, while in a microscope, the stage is the platform on which the slide is placed for viewing.
The specimen is placed on a glass slide and covered with a coverslip before being placed on the stage of the microscope for viewing.
The slide containing the specimen is placed on the stage of the microscope. The stage is a flat platform where the slide sits, and it typically has clips to hold the slide in place. From the stage, the light source below illuminates the specimen for viewing through the lenses of the microscope.
A microscope slide sits on a stage. They are held in place by the two stage clips.
The stage is the platform where the slide is placed for viewing under the microscope lens. The stage clip is used to secure the slide in place on the stage to prevent movement during observation.
On the specimen stage.
The stage is a little platform where the slide is placed.
In compound microscopes for use for viewing thin sections at high power, specimens are mounted on a microscope slide and covered with a coverslip and are placed on the microscope stage or base plate. In stereomicroscopes the same is done however for large objects such as rocks or minerals no microscope slide is required the object to be observed is placed directly on the stage.