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Viewing Bacteria under Oil ImmersionHow to Examine Bacteria Using a Compound Light Microscope
The oil immersion objective lens must be used in order to see individual bacteria through a light microscope. Here are the steps required to get a sample in focus.
Before bacteria can be viewed through a microscope, a bacterial smear must first be created and then heat fixed. Heat fixing kills the microbes and firmly attaches them to the slide, so that the sample is not washed away during the staining procedure. Simple and Differential StainsBecause individual bacteria are essentially colorless, it is necessary to apply a single stain, or series of dyes, in order to see them. A simple stain is the application of just one dye, and provides information limited to the shape and cell arrangement of the bacteria being viewed. Differential stains, such as the Gram, Acid-fast and Endospore stains, employ a series of dyes that help to distinguish groups of bacteria based on a specific chemical or physical attribute of the bacterial cell. Once stained, the individual bacteria within the smear can be viewed using a compound light microscope, at a total magnification of 1000X. This high level of magnification is achieved through the use of an oil immersion objective lens. The Compound Light MicroscopeA microscope is considered compound when it has two sent of lenses—the ocular lenses and objective lenses. The ocular is the lens nearest the eye of the observer. The objectives are the lenses nearest the stage of the scope. Most compound microscopes have either three or four objective lenses. If three, they most often include a:
Some compound microscopes also have an oil immersion objective lens, which has a magnification power of 100X. The magnification of the objective lenses is multiplied by the 10X magnification of the ocular lens, resulting, for the oil immersion objective, in a total 1000X increase in the apparent size of the object being viewed. The oil immersion lens is required for viewing individual bacteria. In order to clearly see an object with this lens, immersion oil must be placed directly on the sample being viewed. The oil increases image clarity, or resolution. Steps to View Bacteria under Oil Immersion
Free Online Quizzes and Tests for Identifying Parts of a Compound Light MicroscopeAccess printable quizzes for identifying parts of a compound microscope, or for more information on the microscope and microbiology in general, see the Virtual Microbiology Classroom. SourcesSchauer Cynthia (2007) Lab Manual to Microbiology for the Health Sciences, Kalamazoo Valley Community College. Bauman, R. (2005) Microbiology. Pearson Benjamin Cummings.
The copyright of the article Viewing Bacteria under Oil Immersion in Microbiology is owned by Tami Port. Permission to republish Viewing Bacteria under Oil Immersion in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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