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These protocol is suitable for specimens such as samples blood and sperm cell
Wet mount
These protocol is suitable for specimens such as samples of pollen, hair, feathers or plant materials.
Dry mount
It is made by carefully smearing a thin layer of the specimen across a slide and then applying a cover slip.
Smear
A drop of water is used to suspend the specimen between the slide and cover slip.
Wet Mount
It is an extremely thin cross-section of a specimen is used.
Section Mount
The specimen is placed directly on the slide without droplets of fluids.
Dry Mount
It is a thin flat piece of glass used to hold objects for examination under a microscope.
Slide
A small thin piece of glass used to cover a specimen on a microscope slide.
Cover Slip
It is a sample of object to be examined under the microscope
Specimen
It moves the condenser up or down to control the lighting focus on the specimen.
Condenser Focus Knob
It is used to collect and focus the light from the illuminator on to the specimen
Condenser
It controls the amount of light reaching the specimen.
Iris Diaphragm
It is the light source for a microscope, typically located in the base of the microscope.
Illuminator
It is the hole in the stage through which the base (transmitted) light reaches the stage.
Aperture
It is where the specimen to be viewed is placed.
Stage
These are used when there is no mechanical stage.
Stage Clips
These are used to focus the microscope.
Coarse and Fine Focus knobs
It is the houses of the objectives.
Nosepiece
It holds the eyepieces in place above the objective lens.
Eyepiece Tube
These are the primary optical lenses on a microscope.
Objective Lenses
It is what you look through at the top of the microscope.
Eyepiece or Ocular
It connects to the base and supports the microscope head.
Arm
It supports the microscope and houses the illuminator
Base
Houses the optical parts in the upper part of the microscope
Head/Body