Microscopy Flashcards
3 main properties of a microscope are?
Good magnification
Good resolution
Good contrast
Light field microscope Principal
The rays from light source the passes through iris diaphragm falls on specimen.
. From specimen both reflected and unreflected light pass through the objective to produce a magnified image
And to the ocular lens and the image is further magnified
Dark field microscope principle
There is the dark field condenserWhich has a central opaque disAnd an annular hollow areaThe lightOnly the reflected light passes through the objectiveTo the ocular lensThe undeflected lightDoes not pass through the objective
Application of dark field microscope
It is used to identify living unstained cells and thin bacteria like spirochetes ‘
Phase contrast microscope
In this microscopeContrast is increased It visualisesNon-stained cellsBy creating difference in contrast between cells and water
What are spirochetes
Spiral shaped bacteria which are seriously pathogenic to humans example- syphillis, limes disease
Principle of phase contrast microscope
- Condenser is similar to that dark field microscope
- it produce a hollow cone of light passes through the specimen and ray is deviated by 1/4th of of the l_ wavelength out of phase.
- The undeviated ray not passing through the cell strikes a phase ring and the deviated ray misses the phase ring
- The rays from the phase ring will by 1/2 wave length out of phase which will cancel out each other and form an image
Condenser → specimen → phase ring → objectivelens → ocular tens
Application of phase contrast microscope.
- Shap of living cells
- Microbial motility
- Detecting microbial internal cellular components like inclusion bodies, spindles chromosomes, cell membrane, nuclei, etc
Principle of fluorescent microscope
- Fluorescent dyes exposed to uv light are said to fluoresce( converts short to long wave length)
- Light passes through excitation filter → dichromatic mirror→ falls on specimen → the fluorescent dye absorb the light and convert to long wave length → objective → barrier filter → eyepiece
Applications of fluorescent microscope
1.epiflourscent microscope → auto fluorescence _ example- cyclospora → microbes coated with floursent dyes → immunoflourscence 2. Confocal microscope
Electron microscope was. Invented by
Ernst ruska
Specimen preparation steps in transmission electron microscope
- Fixation- glutaraldehyde
- Dehydration-ethanol
- Embedding _ plasticpolymers
4 slicing-mounted into coppermetal slide
Principle of electron microscope
Electron beams → high speed electrons travelling in vacuum → magnetic condensers → sliced specimen in copper slide → objective and ocular magnetic → final image on a photographic film.
Denser region in the specimen scatters more electrons hence appears dark.
Applications of electron microscope.
virus detection
→ either directly from clinical specimens, → from tissue culture