To set up a microscope follow these steps:
Stereomicroscope, Compound Microscope, Phase-contrast microscope, electron microscope, Scanning-electron microscope, Transmission electron microscope, Confocal-scanning microscope. THESE ARE JUST SOME. :)
The microscope can become an extension of your sense of vision because, when you look through it, it lets you see very small things close up.
There is a compound light microscope, an scannignn electron microscope, and transmission electron microscope.
There are several type of microscopes, mainly, the one that we use in lab is a simple light microscope or a compound microscope. Then we have the phase contrast microscope, fluorescent microscope, electron microscope (transmission electron microscope [TEM] and scanning electron microscope [SEM]), confocal microscope and even dissection microscope the one which we use during dissections.
There are many. Simple microscope, compound microscope, light microscope, scanning electron microscope, Transmission Electron Microscope, Dissection microscope, etc,but all together there are about 20 different types of microscopes.
The Microscope arm it what holds up the whole dang Microscope.
An electron microscope, specifically a transmission electron microscope, can magnify up to a million times. This type of microscope uses a beam of accelerated electrons to create images with extremely high resolution.
An electron microscope is capable of magnifying objects up to a million times. This type of microscope uses a beam of accelerated electrons to view specimens at a much higher resolution compared to light microscopes.
The stage is the part of the microscope where you place the slide for viewing. You can adjust the position of the slide on the stage to examine different areas under the microscope.
compound microscope
The Microscope arm it what holds up the whole dang Microscope.
It is specially set up to produced a magnified image of an object placed before its objective lens.
An electron microscope.
If a microscope has more than one lens, it is called a compound microscope.
tune it up
tune it up
The word set that completes the analogy is: Scientist - Microscope. In this analogy, a scientist uses a microscope to perform their work or research, just as a librarian uses books in their profession.