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HW # 39 - Watch “Microscope” video (link on the website)

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Week 12, Day One. HW # 39 - Watch “Microscope” video (link on the website) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X- w98KA8UqU Warm up Why would we want to use a microscope to see things? When would it be better to use a telescope or binoculars?. Warm up Response . Homework Response/Check. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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HW # 39 - Watch “Microscope” video (link on the website) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X- w98KA8UqU Warm up Why would we want to use a microscope to see things? When would it be better to use a telescope or binoculars? Week 12, Day One
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Page 1: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

HW # 39- Watch “Microscope” video (link on the website)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-w98KA8UqU

Warm up

Why would we want to use a microscope to see things? When would it be better to use a telescope or binoculars?

Week 12, Day One

Page 2: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

Warm up Response

Page 3: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

Homework Response/Check

Page 4: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

Goals for Today• Microscopes

• KWL• History

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Page 6: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

The History of the Microscope

Page 7: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

A long time ago (around the 1st century) someone picked up a piece of crystal which was thicker in the middle…looked through it and discovered it made things look LARGER.

Page 8: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• That piece of crystal was called a “magnifying glass” and then later was called a lens because it was shaped like a lentil seed.

=

Page 9: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• Then, in the 13th century (1200’s) an Italian inventor made the first eye glasses, allowing the wearer to have magnification. His name was Salvino D’Armate. Eye glasses were also called spectacles.

Page 10: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope• The earliest forms of

magnification were magnifying glasses, usually between 6x to 10x, and were used for looking at tiny insects. These excited general wonder when used to view fleas or tiny creeping things and so were dubbed "flea glasses."

Page 11: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• In the 1590’s two Dutch eye glass makers, Zacharias Jensen and his father Hans, started experimenting with lenses…

Page 12: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• The Jansens put several lenses in a tube and made a very important discovery…the object at the end of the tube appeared MUCH larger than when it was under a plain magnifying lens!

Page 13: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• In the late 1600’s, Anton Van Leeuwenhoek became the first person to make and use a real microscope.

Page 14: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• Anton Van Leeuwenhoek achieved even greater success than his peers by making superior lenses. He learned how to grind and polish lenses. He arranged them in a lens tube and achieved a magnification of 270x – others were lucky to achieve 50x with their microscopes!

Page 15: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope• Anton Van Leeuwenhoek was the first to see bacteria, yeast, and life found

in a drop of pond water. He found extraordinary things using his microscope throughout his lifetime.

• Here is a look at a virtual drop of pond water:

Pond Water

Page 16: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• An English scientist named Robert Hooke further developed Anton Van Leewenhoek’s work and in 1665 Hooke discovered cells.

Page 17: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope

• Robert Hooke developed a primitive compound microscope

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History of the Microscope

• Robert Hooke’s Micrographia was known for stunning illustrations he did himself of the microscopic world.

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History of the Microscope:Illustrations from Micrographia

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History of the Microscope:Robert Hooke’s Cork Cells

Page 21: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope• Despite these great discoveries, microscopes

did not change much over the next 200 years.

Page 22: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope• In the 1850’s a German engineer named Carl

Zeiss began making adjustments to the microscopes he was manufacturing, making them even better.

Page 23: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

History of the Microscope• With the

advancement of technology and improved optics, the compound light microscope came into being.

Page 24: HW # 39 -  Watch “Microscope”  video (link on the website)

Other types of microscopes: Electron Microscopes

• Uses a beam of electrons to illuminate and magnify a specimen

• Very expensive • Huge

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Other types of microscopes: Electron Microscope Images – Human Hair 800x


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