PKU
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 thin glass plate that is placed on top of a specimen in a microscope is called a coverslip. It helps to protect the specimen and ensures that the objective lens can focus properly on the specimen.
The cover over the specimen on a microscope is called a microscope slide cover slip. It protects the specimen from dust and damage and helps to maintain the specimen in place while observing it under the microscope.
That depends upon how the circles are located and the relationship between the numbers that are placed in the circles; unless the circles just happen to make a number, for example: .............. ..O.O.O.... ..........O.. ........O.... ......O...... ....O........ is a 7 regardless of what digits are placed in the circles.
No, using a scanning electron microscope does not kill the specimen. The specimen is placed in a vacuum chamber during imaging, but this process does not kill the specimen.
a cover slip
The one you placed on the viewing plate.
That depends how the circles are placed on the page and what lines are defined between the circles.
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.
In microscopy, a stage is a platform where the specimen or slide is placed for observation under the microscope. The stage can be moved horizontally and vertically to help position and focus on specific areas of the specimen. It is an essential component that allows users to manipulate and study the sample effectively.
The filter should be placed in the furnace with the airflow direction indicated on the filter facing towards the blower motor.
In the middle of the triangle