Types of Microscopy

I.  Brightfield Transmitted Light Microscope

A.  Light transmitted through specimen interacts with specimen to create an image
 
 
SPECIMEN PROPERTIES EFFECTS ON IMAGE LIGHT
Different degrees of opacity, Large differences in refractive index Brightness contrast
Interference or absorption colors Color contrast
Different thickness, small differences in refractive index Phase changes

B.  Thick specimens need to be be sectioned
 
TECHNIQUE MOST OFTEN USED FOR SECTION THICKNESS RANGE (micrometers) IMAGE
Free hand sections Quick for fresh herbacious material and soft wood 10 - 40   Zea Root
Vibratome Fresh herbacious material and soft wood 5 - 40  Pinus Leaf
Sliding microtome Harder wood 1 - 40  Wood Sections
Rotary microtome Paraffin or soft plastic embedded material 1 - 50  Coleus Shoot Apex
Cryomicrotome Frozen material 1 - 50 Arabipopsis root nematode gall

The EMBO Journal Vol. 17,pp. 6799-6811, 1998

Ultramicrotome Hard plastic embedded material
Thin 5 - 10
Semi-thin 2 - 5
Ultra-thin 20 - 200 nm
 
Meristematic Cells

C.  Adjustable parameters

    1.  Magnification
    2.  Resolution
    3.  Contrast

        a.  Introduction of general or specific dyes
        b.  Modification of microscope

II.  Phase Contrast Microscope
 

A.  Useful for observing fresh material with little inherent contrast

B.  Condenser with a circular aperture called the phase annulus

C.  Objective with a circular ring of phase retarding material called the phase ring

D.  Light passing through specimen is shifted in phase compared to background light passing through mounting medium

E.  Specimen light either adds to or subtracts from background light generating lighter or darker regions of contrast

F.  Contrast depends on differences in refractive indices of specimen and mounting medium


III.  Polarized Light Microscope
 

A.  Useful for observing crystaline or quasi-crystaline structure

B.  Below the condenser is a piece of polarizing material called the polarizer

C.  Between the objective and the ocular is another piece of polarized material called the analyzer

D.  Light passing through condenser is polarized into a single plane

E.  If the analyzer is rotated 90o relative to polarizer, no light reaches the ocular and the image is black = crossed polarized light

F.  If specimen has crystals or quasi-crystaline structure (starch and cellulose) then polarized light that passes through these objects will be rotated at some angle relative to the initial plane of polarization.

G.  This rotated light is called birefringence and if rotated enough will pass through the analyzer and be visible.

H.  The analyzer can be rotated relative to the polarizer to examine birefringence that results from different angles of rotation.


IV.  Laser Confocal Microscope
 

A.  Useful for observing fluorescent material

        1.  Fluorescence results when material absorbs light of one wavelength and emits light of a longer wavelength (lower energy)
        2.  Different materials absorb and fluoresce different wavelengths of light

B.  Laser beam is shined on specimen through the objective

C.  Depending on the material,  fluorescence may take place and be collected by the objective

D.  Depth of field is severly restricted so that only fluorescence coming from a very thin plane in the section is collected

        1.  This results in a very sharp image since no background light (glare) is collected

E.   Image capture and fine focus of microscope controlled by a computer

        1.   The computer creates a digital frame of the restricted depth of field image
        2.  The computer then moves the specimen to a different focal plane and captures a new image
        3.  After scanning through a range of foci, the computer combines all the image frames

F.  Final image is very clean (high signal to noise ratio) since it contains very little noise from out of focus parts of the specimen


V.  Transmission Electron Microscope
 

A.  Useful for resolving objects below the resolution of light

B.  Design is basically like compound light microscope but TEM

        1.  Uses electrons focused by electromagnetic lenses in a vacuum environment
        2.  Specimens are much thinner
        3.  Specimens stained with heavy metals since most biological material is transparent to electrons
        4.  Image can't be seen directly, but rather is viewed via a fluorescent screen
        5.  Images are gray scale since electrons have no color
 

VI.  Scanning Electron Microscope
 
A.  Useful for observing surface details

B.  Electron beam is focused on surface of specimen with electromagnetic lenses in a vacuum

C.  Beam scan back and forth across specimen in syncrony with the electron beam of a cathode ray tube

D.  Electrons of beam cause various kinds of signals to be released by atoms in specimen

        1.  Secondary electrons
        2.  Backscattered electrons
        3.  Photons
        4.  X-rays

E.  The intensity of these signals varies in the specimen and on the display screen creating the image
 

MICROSCOPE MAGNIFICATION RANGE RESOLUTION DEPTH OF FIELD
LIGHT 1 - 1,000 X 0.2 um 2 um
TRANSMISSION ELECTRON 2,000 - 900,000 X 0.21 - 0.5 nm 0.11 um
SCANNING ELECTRON 2 - 300,000 X 3.5 - 6 nm up to 1 cm

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