Chemo microscopy is the use of chemical reagents to examine or identify a crude drug with the help of a microscope
The term "fluorescence microscopy" is a type of light microscopy in which the specimen is irradiated at wavelengths that excite fluorochromes. In medicine, it is used to detect antigens.
Electron microscopy gives higher resolution, but it's expensive, slow, and cumbersome. And for many things, it's not needed.
Electron microscopy; Scanning Electron Microscopes (SEM) and Transmission Electron Microscopes (TEM). The vacuum required for electron microscopy to work correctly precludes the observation of living organisms. Biological samples must be dried then coated with a conductive metal.
Transmission electron microscopy
one Major difference is confocal microscopy has confocality which means it reduces the background signal which is not presented in conventional fluorescence microscope usually termed as epifluorescence microscope
Introduction to basic techniques in microscopy involves light microscopy, laser scanning, types of dyes, the cell, electron microscopy, differential interface microscopy, histological stains and histochemical stains.
theres no such thing as chemo cancer but chemo (chemotherepy) is a treatment for cancer
Dark field microscopy (dark ground microscopy) describes microscopy methods, in both light and electron microscopy, which exclude the unscattered beam from the image. As a result, the field around the specimen (i.e. where there is no specimen to scatter the beam) is generally dark.
No
Transmission electron microscopy
Microscopy Society of America was created in 1942.
Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy
Transmission electron microscopy
Depending on what microscopy you are doing.. Bacterial microscopy starts with 40x and Blood smear microscopy at 10x.
Chemo - comics - was created in 1962.
Robert F. Bils has written: 'Electron microscopy' -- subject(s): Electron microscopy, Laboratory manuals, Microscopy, Electron
The term "fluorescence microscopy" is a type of light microscopy in which the specimen is irradiated at wavelengths that excite fluorochromes. In medicine, it is used to detect antigens.