QUESTION IMAGE
Question
comprehension check!
- what are the three basic microscopy concepts covered?
a. _______________
b. _______________
c. _______________
- how does magnification play a role in microscopy? _______________________
_____________________________________________________________________
- what is “working space” when discussing microscopy? _____________________
_____________________________________________________________________
- which one of these has the largest working space? image of three microscope objectives: 10×, 40×, 100×
- what is the ‘field of view’ when discussing microscopy? ___________________
_____________________________________________________________________
- which one of these has the largest field of view? image of three circles: x40 (many small dots), x100 (few smiley faces), x400 (one big smiley face)
- observing the images identify which of the three concepts of microscopy, if any, is not fully realized.
a. image of a blurry organism _______________
b. image of a clear organism _______________
c. image of a small organism _______________
d. image of a slightly blurry organism _______________
- how would you fix image d? ___________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
- how would you fix image a? ___________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
To answer these questions, we rely on fundamental microscopy concepts (magnification, working space, field of view) and how they interact. Here are the key points for each:
1. Three basic microscopy concepts
Common core concepts in microscopy are:
- Magnification: How much an image is enlarged.
- Working Space (or Working Distance): The distance between the objective lens and the specimen when in focus.
- Field of View: The area visible through the microscope at a given magnification.
2. Role of magnification in microscopy
Magnification enlarges the specimen, allowing visualization of fine details (e.g., cells, organelles) that are invisible to the naked eye. Higher magnification reveals more detail but reduces the field of view and working space.
3. “Working space” (Working Distance) in microscopy
Working space (or working distance) is the distance between the objective lens and the specimen slide when the specimen is in sharp focus. It decreases as magnification increases (e.g., 10× objective has more working distance than 100×).
4. Largest working space (from the diagram: 10×, 40×, 100× objectives)
Working distance is inversely related to magnification. The lowest magnification objective (10×) has the largest working space.
5. “Field of view” in microscopy
Field of view is the total area visible through the microscope at a specific magnification. A larger field of view shows more of the specimen (but less detail), while a smaller field of view shows less area (but more detail).
6. Largest field of view (from the diagram: ×40, ×100, ×400)
Field of view is inversely related to magnification. The lowest magnification (×40) has the largest field of view (since lower magnification shows a wider area).
7. Identifying unrealized microscopy concepts (for images a–d)
- Image a: Likely has poor clarity (resolution) or is out of focus.
- Image b: May be in focus (good resolution).
- Image c: Likely has low magnification (small image, large field of view but less detail).
- Image d: May have issues with focus or contrast.
Without seeing the images, we assume:
- a: Focus (resolution) not realized.
- b: All concepts (magnification, working space, field of view) realized.
- c: Magnification not fully realized (too low, image too small).
- d: Focus (or contrast) not fully realized.
8. Fixing Image d
If Image d is out of focus, adjust the fine focus knob to sharpen the image. If contrast is low, adjust the diaphragm or light intensity.
9. Fixing Image a
If Image a is blurry (out of focus), adjust the fine focus knob (or coarse focus, if very out of focus) to bring the specimen into sharp focus.
Final Answers (Key Points)
- a. Magnification; b. Working Space; c. Field of View
- Magnification enlarges the specimen to see fine details.
- Distance between objective lens and specimen (in focus).
- 10× objective (lowest magnification → largest working space).
- Total area visible through the microscope at a magnification.
- ×40 (lowest magnification → largest field of view).
- (Example) a: Focus; b: None; c: Magnification; d: Focus.
- Adjust fine focus (or contrast/light).
- Adjust fine/coarse focus to sharpen.
(Note: For questions 7–9, precise answers depend on the actual images, but the above follows standard microscopy principles.)
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To answer these questions, we rely on fundamental microscopy concepts (magnification, working space, field of view) and how they interact. Here are the key points for each:
1. Three basic microscopy concepts
Common core concepts in microscopy are:
- Magnification: How much an image is enlarged.
- Working Space (or Working Distance): The distance between the objective lens and the specimen when in focus.
- Field of View: The area visible through the microscope at a given magnification.
2. Role of magnification in microscopy
Magnification enlarges the specimen, allowing visualization of fine details (e.g., cells, organelles) that are invisible to the naked eye. Higher magnification reveals more detail but reduces the field of view and working space.
3. “Working space” (Working Distance) in microscopy
Working space (or working distance) is the distance between the objective lens and the specimen slide when the specimen is in sharp focus. It decreases as magnification increases (e.g., 10× objective has more working distance than 100×).
4. Largest working space (from the diagram: 10×, 40×, 100× objectives)
Working distance is inversely related to magnification. The lowest magnification objective (10×) has the largest working space.
5. “Field of view” in microscopy
Field of view is the total area visible through the microscope at a specific magnification. A larger field of view shows more of the specimen (but less detail), while a smaller field of view shows less area (but more detail).
6. Largest field of view (from the diagram: ×40, ×100, ×400)
Field of view is inversely related to magnification. The lowest magnification (×40) has the largest field of view (since lower magnification shows a wider area).
7. Identifying unrealized microscopy concepts (for images a–d)
- Image a: Likely has poor clarity (resolution) or is out of focus.
- Image b: May be in focus (good resolution).
- Image c: Likely has low magnification (small image, large field of view but less detail).
- Image d: May have issues with focus or contrast.
Without seeing the images, we assume:
- a: Focus (resolution) not realized.
- b: All concepts (magnification, working space, field of view) realized.
- c: Magnification not fully realized (too low, image too small).
- d: Focus (or contrast) not fully realized.
8. Fixing Image d
If Image d is out of focus, adjust the fine focus knob to sharpen the image. If contrast is low, adjust the diaphragm or light intensity.
9. Fixing Image a
If Image a is blurry (out of focus), adjust the fine focus knob (or coarse focus, if very out of focus) to bring the specimen into sharp focus.
Final Answers (Key Points)
- a. Magnification; b. Working Space; c. Field of View
- Magnification enlarges the specimen to see fine details.
- Distance between objective lens and specimen (in focus).
- 10× objective (lowest magnification → largest working space).
- Total area visible through the microscope at a magnification.
- ×40 (lowest magnification → largest field of view).
- (Example) a: Focus; b: None; c: Magnification; d: Focus.
- Adjust fine focus (or contrast/light).
- Adjust fine/coarse focus to sharpen.
(Note: For questions 7–9, precise answers depend on the actual images, but the above follows standard microscopy principles.)