body tube
The object that you look at under a microscope is called a specimen. It is placed on a glass slide and then magnified and viewed through the microscope lens.
Look sideways at the slide table. SLOWLY lower the tube until it just touches the slide on the slide table. Then look through the eyepiece and SLOWLY focus BACKWARDS. That's your best bet.
When you look at a nearby object, the ciliary muscles in your eye contract, causing the lens to become thicker and rounder. This helps to increase the refractive power of the lens, allowing you to focus on the nearby object. When you then look at a distant object, the ciliary muscles relax, causing the lens to become thinner and flatter, decreasing its refractive power and allowing you to focus on the distant object.
First, put an image in the center of the slide. Add on drop of water to the slide then put on the cover piece. Take it over to the microscope then use the stage clips to hold it down. Look through the eyepiece and then you will see a magnified image or cell organisms living in the water.
Wet mounts are not attached to the slide, it is "floating". If you use an oil immersion lens, you have to put a drop of oil on the slide cover so the light can correctly focus. The oil will cause the slide cover to stick to the end of your Oil immersion lens. When you focus the field of focus will stay the same since the slip cover is stuck to the lens. When you go to change objectives, the cover will travel with your oil immersion lense.
It is a square section which you place the slide on to have a look at the object.
What you do first when you use a microscope you put the slide in. Then you focus the microscope. Then you look at the object you are supposed to or look at the object you want to.
The object that you look at under a microscope is called a specimen. It is placed on a glass slide and then magnified and viewed through the microscope lens.
Look at any thing still or stare at a not moving object like door or chair etc.
To fixx the eyes in a steady and earnest look; to look with eagerness or curiosity, as in admiration, astonishment, or with studious attention., To view with attention; to gaze on ., A fixed look; a look of eagerness, wonder, or admiration; a continued look of attention., The object gazed on.
You try it! You use objects of various weights. You measure the force in each case. You look for a pattern in the results.
Sadly, slide projectors have had their day and it is virtually impossible to buy a new slide projector now. The best idea is to look at online auction sites. There is a steady stream of used projectors for sale and it won't take long to find either a B&H or a compatible model.
The stage clip holds the the specimen slide firmly on the stage and is needed if the microscope is tilted.
it makes the slide look more professional
slide show view shows you a preview of what your slide show will look like
A distance vs time graph for an object experiencing constant acceleration would be a straight line that curves upward, showing a steady increase in distance over time.
It refers to whatever is on a slide. That could be text or graphics or video that people see when they look at a slide.