MICROSCOPY Flashcards

1
Q

magnification

A

the amount of times larger the image of an object is compared to the objects actual size

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2
Q

resolution

A

how well the microscope can distinguish between two separate points on an image as two separate objects

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3
Q

how does an optical (light) microscope work

A
  • light passes through thin sample layer that is mounted on a glass slide
  • light is focused through lenses forming an image for viewing on eyepiece
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4
Q

pros of optical (light) microscope

A
  • cheap
  • easy to use
  • portable
  • able to study living specimen/ tissue
  • can produce colored images
  • can view basic structures (e.g: nucleus)
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5
Q

cons of optical (light) microscope

A
  • low resolution
  • low magnification
  • specimen may require staining before viewing
  • cannot be used in places with bright light
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6
Q

why does optical (light) microscopes have low resolution

A
  • the wavelength of light is too long to pass through two separate structures
  • so it cant distinguish between two close-together but separate objects in the image
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7
Q

magnification (light microscope) equation

A

objective lens x magnifying lens

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8
Q

photomicrograph

A

image seen viewing specimen on a light microsocope

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9
Q

Laser scanning confocal microscope LSCM

A

uses laser light to scan object point by point and assemble a pixel image on a computer screen

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10
Q

pros of LCSM microscope

A
  • can view image in different dimensional images
  • high resolution
  • viewing of living things
  • has depth selectivity to focus on organelles at different depths
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11
Q

how do a transmission electron microscope work

A
  • electron gun fires electron beam down
  • condenser lens focuses electrons in one beam
  • beam passes through chemically-fixed, dehydrated, and stained specimen
  • objective lens focuses beam into image
    image enlarges and viewed on phosphor screen
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12
Q

pros of TEM

A
  • very high magnification allowing viewing of cells in great depth
  • high resolution of a samples inner structure
  • 2d image of cells ultrastructure
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13
Q

cons of TEM

A
  • sample needs to be thinned and chemically fixed, and dehydrated
  • shows 3d structures in 2d which can be difficult to interpret
  • difficult to use
  • cant view live specimens
  • requires training as difficult to use
  • large and expensive
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14
Q

how is specimen prepared for TEM

A
  • specimen is fixed in formaldehyde to preserve cells structure
  • dehydrated as water from cell is replaced with organic solvent (ethanol)
  • replace solvent w resin
  • thin down specimen
  • stain using metal salts to increase contrast
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15
Q

how does a scanning electron microscope work SEM

A
  • electron gun shoots electron beam
  • electrons reflect off sample surface
  • the reflected electrons are focused on screen
  • producing a 3d image of cells
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16
Q

pros of scanning electron

A
  • produces 3d visual of cells topography
  • fast (produces visual in under 5 mins)
  • high magnification
  • high resolution
17
Q

cons of SEM

A
  • expensive
  • require training to operate
  • risk of radiation exposure
  • cannot view live cells
  • uses harmful metallic salt stains
18
Q

preparing specimen for SEM

A
  • fix sample using formaldehyde
  • dehydrate sample using solvent (ethanol) to replace water
  • mount sample on Aluminium stub
  • coat sample in conductive metal (gold)
19
Q

SEM vs TEM

A

SEM = 3d vs TEM = 2d

SEM = cell topography vs TEM = ultrastructure inside cell

SEM = thick sample vs TEM = thin sample

SEM = lower resolution vs TEM = higher resolution

SEM = lower magnification vs TEM = Higher magnification

20
Q

methylene blue

A

all purpose stain

21
Q

acetic orcein

A

binds to DNA and stains chromosomes dark red

22
Q

eosin

A

stains cytoplasm

23
Q

sudan red

A

stains lipids

24
Q

iodine in potassium iodide

A

stains cellulose in plant cell walls yellow
and starch granules blue/black

25
Q

equation for magnification (mia)

A

magnification = image / actual

26
Q

how to draw cell

A

draw cell in pencil
label structures
give magnification scale

27
Q

eyepiece graticules

A

measuring device in eyepiece of microscope

28
Q

stage graticule

A

scale placed on microscope stage to calibrate eyepiece graticules