1. Is the specimen transparent/translucent at the wavelengths you wish to examine?
2. What level of magnification are you interested in? (optical or EM)?
... crossed Nichols?
... What discipline?
... liquid or solid specimen?
??
JCF
Put the specimen in the bottle.I brought back a specimen of English money.They put the bullet in a specimen bag.
An electron microscope requires that the subject be dead to function. In order to receive a picture, the specimen must be coated in chemicals and put into a vacuum, a process which will kill any living specimen. A light microscope, although not as detailed, will allow the scientist to observe living specimens.
To examine it under the microscope, the specimen needs to be illuminated by either a light underneath or a stream of electrons. If the specimen is too thick, and light or electrons cannot penetrate it, the scientist will be unable to see any detail.
The compound microscope is used to examine cells, bacteria, and other organisms
A microscope allows the human eye to examine tiny particles that otherwise cannot be seen.
Is called an electron microscope
That would be an electron microscope.
This is called electron microscope.
This is called electron microscope.
The Electron Microscope uses a beam of electrons to illuminate the specimen for examination.
So far as I know, this would be called an electron microscope.
Put the specimen in the bottle.I brought back a specimen of English money.They put the bullet in a specimen bag.
On top of the Microscope slide, the specimen you wish to examine is place and then water and a coverslip is placed on top of that. Other things may be added depending on the speciment you wish to examine such as stainers like Iodine.
I have no idea and none hese answers help imam get an F on this paper
Specimen
An electron microscope requires that the subject be dead to function. In order to receive a picture, the specimen must be coated in chemicals and put into a vacuum, a process which will kill any living specimen. A light microscope, although not as detailed, will allow the scientist to observe living specimens.
A cover slip is a small, and extremely thin piece of glass used in the operation of a microscope. The cover slip is placed on top of the specimen which is then placed under the microscope. The function of the cover slip is that it keeps the specimen in place while you examine it.