The Intricacies Of A Modern Compound Microscope

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ArticlePros.com » Education » Science & Technology » The Intricacies Of A Modern Compound Microscope

  • Date: 2005-08-05
  • Author: Wendy Butler
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  • The Intricacies Of A Modern Compound Microscope


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         The compound microscope is one form of microscope that uses a
    single glass lens of short focal length for the object while
    another single glass lens for the ocular or eyepiece. The
    modern compound microscope is generally far more complex in
    nature. These deal with multiple lenses. These lenses are on
    both the ends i.e. objective and eyepiece assemblies.

    Chromatic aberration and spherical aberration appear in a much
    more reduced form when these multi-component lenses are used.
    To provide stable, controllable illumination the mirror is
    replaced by a lamp unit in a modern compound microscope.

    It is basically an uncertain criterion while indicating the
    inventor of the compound microscope. It is often and generally
    believed that in 1590 two persons, father and son,
    spectacle-makers from the Netherlands, invented the first
    compound microscope. Their names were Hans Janssen and
    Zacharias Janssen. But there is a real heavyweight contender
    for the title. Galileo Galilei. In 1609 Galileo Galilei
    developed an "occhiolino" or compound microscope. It comprised
    of a convex and a concave lens. In the late 1600's Christiaan
    Huygens, another inventor from the Netherlands also developed a
    two-lens or a compound microscope.

    But whoever invented it, the compound microscope follows almost
    the same principal till date. The compound microscope could be
    divided into eight major parts depending on their
    functionality. They are ocular lens or eye-piece, objective
    turret or nosepiece, objective lenses, coarse adjustment knob,
    fine adjustment knob, object holder or stage, mirror and
    diaphragm and condenser. Each of the parts synchronizes with
    the other and this reveals an image that is magnified up to
    1000Ã. A compound microscope is used on specimens that have a
    very limited depth of field i.e. very minute or thin specimens.


    A typical compound microscope is composed of three main
    objective lenses. The first one is the scanning lens. This one
    has a magnifying power of 4Ã-. Then there is a low power lens
    with a magnifying power of 10Ã-, and a high power lens with a
    magnifying power of 40Ã-. In the more advanced version of the
    compound microscope there is an additional lease present. This
    fourth objective lens is an oil immersion lens. This oil
    immersion lens can champion a magnifying power of about 100Ã-.

    According to the Encyclopedia, "Optical microscopes are
    restricted in their ability to resolve features by a phenomenon
    called diffraction which, based on the numerical aperture (NA or
    /A/_/N/) of the optical system and the wavelengths of light used
    (λ), sets a definite limit (/d/) to the optical resolution.
    Assuming that optical aberrations are negligible, the
    resolution (/d/) is given by: d = frac {lambda} {A_N} usually,
    a λ of 550 nm is assumed, corresponding to green light. With
    air as medium, the highest practical /A/_/N/ is 0.95, and with
    oil, up to 1.5. Due to diffraction, even the best optical
    microscope is limited to a resolution of 0.2 micrometers."

    On the whole a compound microscope is the most widely used and
    vastly accepted microscope in the world.

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    Looking at Microscopes -
    http://www.microscope-reviews.com - Technology advances at such
    an astronomical rate that it's hard to keep up - take advantage
    of these advances with some light hearted reviews of devices
    designed to make our life easier. Here we look at microscopes:
    http://www.microscopes-reviewed.com Wendy Butler -
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