Biology, asked by sravya3984, 7 months ago

what are the parts of microscope what are their uses​

Answers

Answered by gangotri8
5

Answer:

Parts of the Microscope and Their Uses

The Eyepiece Lens. ••• The eyepiece contains the ocular lens, which the user looks through to see the magnified specimen. ...

The Eyepiece Tube. ••• ...

The Microscope Arm. ••• ...

The Microscope Base. ••• ...

The Microscope Illuminator. ••• ...

Stage and Stage Clips. ••• ...

The Microscope Nosepiece. ••• ...

The Objective Lenses. •••

Answered by SUPER30of2020
1

Answer:

Parts of the Microscope and Their Uses

The Eyepiece Lens. ••• The eyepiece contains the ocular lens, which the user looks through to see the magnified specimen. ...

The Eyepiece Tube. ••• ...

The Microscope Arm. ••• ...

The Microscope Base. ••• ...

The Microscope Illuminator. ••• ...

Stage and Stage Clips. ••• ...

The Microscope Nosepiece. ••• ...

The Objective Lenses. •••

Explanation:

Parts of the Microscope and Their Uses

Updated April 28, 2018

By Adam Johnson

One of the wonders of the scientific world is that so much of what goes on is invisible to the naked eye. Invented in 1590 by a Dutch optician named Zacharias Janssen, the compound (or light) microscope gives students and scientists a close-up view of tiny structures like cells and bacteria. Read on to find out more about microscope parts and how to use them.

The Eyepiece Lens

Microscope eyepiece

The eyepiece contains the ocular lens, which the user looks through to see the magnified specimen. The ocular lens has a magnification that can range from 5x to 30x, but 10x or 15x is the most common setting.

The Eyepiece Tube

Microscope eyepiece tube

The eyepiece tube connects the eyepiece and ocular lens to the objective lenses located near the microscope stage.

The Microscope Arm

Close up of microscope arm

The microscope arm connects the eyepiece tube to the base. This is the part you should hold when transporting a microscope.

The Microscope Base

Laboratory microscope

The base provides stability and support for the microscope when it is upright. The base also typically holds the illuminator, or light source.

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