Biology, asked by rithusonuRithu67661, 8 months ago

What is the formula that would be used to calculate the actual diameter of pollen grain?

Answers

Answered by mandar3412
0

Answer:

HEY BUDDY HERE IS YOUR ANSWER:)

Firstly, a camera does not exactly replace the eye in the microscope system. The microscope is sometimes extended with a tube to fit on the eyepiece of the microscope - or even replace the eyepiece.

Secondly, photographs can be reproduced at different scales to show the detail of the pollen grain. A small grain may be enlarged on the photograph, whereas a large grain may already fill the photo.

You need to be able to measure the size of your pollen grains in your microscope system. Almost every microscope is different!

This can be done in two different ways:-

a) using a "stage micrometer". This is a finely engraved slide which you put on the microscope stage in place of the microscope slide. When you focus on it, you see there is a small ruler which spans the field of view from one side to the other. You can use this ruler to measure the "diameter of the field of view" and record this "fov" measurement for use from there on. This measurement is different if you change either the eyepiece or the objective, but with your x10 eyepiece and your x40 objective, it is a constant value. It is useful if this measurement is converted to micrometres (µm) - 1µm is 1/1000 of a milimetre.

You can then estimate how many pollen grains will fit across the field of view. You may estimate how many would fit in half the field of view (the radius) and double the value. Divide that number into the fov and you have the size of your pollen grain.

b) using an "eyepiece micrometer". This is a transparent film or glass disc which fits into the eyepiece just below the top lens. This lens will unscrew and the eyepiece micrometer will rest on the black ring part way down the eyepiece tube. The eyepiece micrometer remains in position all the time and you will see a ruler superimposed on your view of pollen grains.

First you need to calibrate the eyepiece micrometer by looking at a stage micrometer and noting how many eyepiece units match with how many stage units - ie you use a stage micrometer as a ruler to measure the scale in the eyepiece so you can record how many micrometres (µm) each unit of the eyepiece micrometer measures. You can then remove the stage micrometer and use the eyepiece micrometer as your "ruler" to measure anything on a microscope slide.

You will now be able to measure the diameter of your pollen grains (or anything else under the microscope) and compare them with pollen grains in our collection which are similar size. Leighton Dann points out that Helianthus pollen (Sunflower) is useful for calibrating a microscope's field of view - the pollen grains are almost exactly 35 µm long.

HERE YOU HAVE IT ALL MATE:)

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