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    Telescopes

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    Telescopes Hans Lippershey (1570 - September 1619) was a Dutch lens maker. Lippershey is believed to be the first to apply for a patent for his design‚ a few weeks before Jacob Metius (a Dutch instrument maker and optician)‚ and making it available for general use in 1608. The telescope invented by Lippershey was composed of a convex and a concave lens‚ as this construction did not invert the image and had only a magnification of just 3x. Galileo’s telescope improved the original Dutch telescopes

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    Teenage Pregnancy

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    convex lens‚ by using the lens equation: 1/f=1/u+1/v * Independent variables: * Screen * lens * Dependent variables: * distance between the source of light and the lens “V” which is “X” value * distance between lens and the screen “ Y value” * Controlled variables: * ruler * screen size * source of light * Hypothesis: When the lens is displaced further away from the light “image” source the focal point is going to get smaller‚ and when the lens is approached

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    Conic Sections

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    Spherical power vi. with the slit in this position‚ the fog is reduced to best acuity. vii. the lens in place is the sphere power of the patient’s lens formula (pt’s final sphere) viii. the slit is rotated 90 degrees. This will fog the patient again viiii. the fog is again reduced to best acuity. The algebraic difference between the power of the lens in place at the end of this operation and the lens power in place at the end of step one is the minus cylinder power (c) Advantages - recommended for

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    Lab 4

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    parts: Data part 2 After turning the light on‚ what two components allow one to adjust the light intensity of the microscope? Rheostat and the iris What structure holds the slide in place on the stage of the microscope? Spring load clip Which lens is in the light path? 4 x Of the stage adjustment knobs‚ the larger knob / Y-adjustment (on the top) moves the slide in which direction? In which direction does the smaller / X-adjustment knob (on the bottom) move the slide? The top y moves

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    certain distance appear out of focus or blurry. Objects appear out of focus because those images are not projecting correctly on retina. The best treatment available for myopia are corrective lens that can manipulate those projections so that the images hit the retina where they’re supposed to hit. The corrective lens has a concave side that spread the light rays apart; which makes the images seem closer to the individual (Martini et al.‚ 2018‚ p. 569). 3. Mr. Drummond’s symptoms of vertigo appear when

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    Microscopy Lab

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    Lab  #1  ‐  Introduction  to  the  Microscopy  &  Observation  of  Prokaryotic  and  Eukaryotic  Cells  Introduction  Many  of  the  cells  and  organisms  that  you  will  be  studying  are  at  the  lower  limits  of  visibility  of  light  microscopes;  therefore‚  it  is  extremely  important  that  you  attain  critical  lighting  and  focussing.  It  is  also  important  to  handle  the  microscope  competently  to  avoid  damaging  either  the  microscope  or  the  preparation  you  are  studying

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    diseases. As you saw in Activity 33‚ “From One to Another‚” researchers Alexandre Yersin and Shibasaburo Kitasato independently used the microscope to identify the cause of the bubonic plague. Compound microscopes—microscopes that use more than one lens—were invented around 1595. These first microscopes usually magnified objects only 20–30 times their original size. But as you will learn in the next few activities‚ even this level of magnification was enough to discover a world of new scientific

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    Zoology Lab

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    Stero microscope low power instrument used in visualizing large objects at low magnification (5-50X); produces unreversed‚ right side up‚ 3-d image; unlike the compound microscope. 1. Prepare slide 2. Turn on transformer 3. Use lowest power lens 4. One eye closed‚ find and focus the object sharply 5. Close eye open the other 6. Keep both eyes open when viewing object Compound microscope Magnifies to about 1000 times with some modification‚ can be increase 2-3 times (but that’s about

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    eld Introduc on Some objects are far too small to be seen with the human eye. However‚ by using a microscope many can be viewed in great detail. There are many types of microscopes that range from low–level magni ca on (i.e.‚ hand held magni ca on lens) to very high power magni ca on (i.e.‚ an electron micro scope). In the middle of that range lies the light microscope‚ or for our purposes‚ the compound light microscope‚ which uses mul ple lenses. The compound light microscope (Figure 1) has two

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    rules. Background information • The measurement of specimen size with a microscope‚ is made by using an eyepiece graticule. This is a glass or plastic disc with 8 divisions etched onto its surface‚ which is inserted into the eyepiece lens. • The size of the eyepiece graticule remains constant‚ despite the fact that the image viewed will change its size depending upon whether high- or low-power objective lenses are used. For example a cell viewed with the x40 objective

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