Glossary of Microscopy Terms
- Abbe Condenser
- - see condenser
- Abbe Error
- Additional linear off-axis error
introduced through amplification of tilt and wobble with a long moment
arm. This type of error occurs when the point under measurement is a
relatively long distance from the axis of motion. For example, XYZ
stages incorporating an angle bracket between the moving elements will
exhibit measurable Abbe error since the Z stage is significantly
displaced above the X and Y axes. It appears as runout, but unlike
true runout, Abbe error can be minimized by reducing the lever arm.
- Aberration
- - see chromatic
and spherical
- Achromatic
- - term referring to the lens. A lens
which brings in light from two parts of the spectrum (red and blue
wavelengths) to the same focus, reducing Chromatic Aberration. This is
the most common lens on a microscope. Color fringes may appear when
viewing under bright white light because not all wave lengths are
brought within an acceptable focus range. If you use filtered light (monochromatic) as
in phase contrast the image will be sharper.
- Analyzer
- - see polarizer
- Barrel Focus
- - the body tube of the microscope moves
to focus the objective lenses and the stage is fixed.
- Bertrand Lens
- - in polarizing microscopes a special
lens used to view interfaced figures.
- Brightfield Illumination
- - bright white light which illuminates a
transparent or translucent specimen which appears dark against a
bright or white background.
- Body Tube Length
- - the distance between the objective and
the top of the body tube, usually 160mm. Objectives are designed for a
specific length, if miss-matched, spherical aberration will occur.
- Coaxial
- - focusing system where the coarse and
fine focus are mounted together on a common axis.
- Condenser (substage)
- - provides an even cone of light that
illuminates the specimen. Light from the condenser converges on the
specimen, passes through it, and diverges to from an inverted
illumination cone that is captured by the objective lens. The Abbe
condenser is the most common. The condenser numerical aperture (NA)
should be equal to or greater than the highest objective NA., usually
1.25 to 1.32 for a 100x oil objective. The resolving power of the
optical system composed of condenser, objective ocular lens is limited
to the lowest NA of its individual components.
- Chromatic
Aberration
- - failure of lens to bring light of
different wavelengths to a common focus . This can be compensated by
using an achromatic lens.
- Crossed Roller Ways
- Crossed rollers define a way by fitting
cylindrical rollers between hardened "v" ways. Every other
roller is rotated 90 degrees, resulting in a symmetrical load bearing
capacity. The line contact resulting from the roller-to-v fit
provides a load bearing capacity of about an order of magnitude above
that of ball ways. Roller retention and preloading are similar to
those of ball way designs. Crossed roller designs provide moderate and
uniform friction, high load bearing capacity, high linear and
torsional stiffness, moderate cost, and very good straight line
accuracy.
- Darkfield Illumination
- - An optical technique where the
specimen is seen as a bright object against a dark background.
- Depth of Field
- - the distance along the optical axis
throughout which the object can be located and yet be imaged with
satisfactory clarity. This is used in stereo microscopy.
- Differential Interference Contrast (DIC)
- A mode of contrast generation in
microscopy that yields an image with a shadow relief. The relief
reflects the gradient of optical path difference. DIC, which is a form
of interference microscopy that uses polarizing beam splitters.
- Diopter Adjustment
- - adjustment ring of the eyepiece that
fine focuses the eye lens element.
- Disc Diaphragm
- - a circular disc, located under the
stage platform containing five or six apertures of various sizes which
controls the size of illumination cone converging on the specimen.
- DIN
- - a term referring to optics which is
the abbreviation for Deutsche Industrie Normen, an industry standard
for optics.
- Eyepiece
- - also known as ocular, it produces the
second stage of magnification enlarging the image magnified by the
objective lens. Eyepieces vary in magnification from 5x to 30x. The
standard is 10x.
- Eyepiece Diaphragm
- - the piece inside the eyepiece which
holds gracticules and reticules. It also defines the round field of
view that is seen through the microscope.
- Field-Of-View
- - the visible area through the eyepiece
when the microscope is in focus.
- Flat Field Objectives or Optics
- - lenses which are corrected to
eliminate curvature. Flat field optics are a higher grade then
achromatic.
- Flatness of Travel
- Deviation from ideal straight line
travel in a vertical plane, also referred to as vertical runout.
- Huygenian
- - a type of eyepiece that has two
planoconvex lens elements with the eyepiece diaphragm between them.
Usually with a narrow field of view.
- Immersion Objective
- - most common is the 100x oil objective.
Oil is placed on the cover glass of the slide which (and sometimes on
the top element of the condenser) to produce a high magnification and
high resolving power of the objective when immersed in the oil. This
produces the full NA of objective lens.
- Iris Diaphragm
- - usually mounted under the condenser
this controls the amount of light converging on the specimen by
opening or closing the leaf diaphragm.
- Koehler Illumination
- - a technique for uniformly illuminating
a field from non-uniform light such as a coiled filament lamp.
- Magnification
- - the enlargement of an object through
the lens system. This is determined by multiplying the magnifying
power of the objective by the eyepiece.
- Magnifying Power
- - magnification, which is the ability of
the lens to make an object appear larger. It is the number of times
the image is seen through the microscope is larger than the item
appears to the unaided eye.
- Mechanical Stage
- - a device on the platform for holding
and moving the slide (or specimen) on an X or Y axis.
- Micrometer Disc
- - a glass disc with a scale or grid
mounted to the eyepiece diaphragm used for measurement.
- Numerical Aperture
- - (N.A.) a term representative of the
angle included by a cone of light accepted by the objective of a
microscope. The higher the N.A., the greater the resolving power.
- Objective lens
- - forms the primary image of the
microscope which is seen through the eyepiece. The markings on the
objective lens are the magnifying power (such as 10x), followed by the
NA (0.25) and the tube length. Other numbers which appear on the
objective lens may refer to the manufactures catalog number of the
particular item.
- Oculars
- -see "eyepiece"
- Orthogonality
- The degree of perpendicularity, or
squareness, between the two axes in an X-Y or X-Z table This parameter
is usually measured in arc-seconds or microradians.
- Parcentered
- - When all the elements of the optical
system are aligned on a single axis thus reducing aberration.
- Parfocal (parfocality)
- - a term used describing the property of
a microscope where the subject stays in focus when the objective
lenses are changed. Less then 1/2 of a revolution from the fine
adjustment is usually acceptable.
- Pitch
- An angular deviation possible in
positioning systems, in which the tables’ leading edge rises or
falls as the table translates along its direction of travel. This
represents rotation around a horizontal axis, perpendicular to the
direction of travel.
- Planachromat
- - an achromat lens which has been
corrected for a flat field.
- Planoconcave Mirror
- - a two sided mirror 50mm in dia., with
one side flat (plano) and the other curved, (concave). The concave
side is used for low NA when no condenser is used, the plano surface
is used with a substage condenser.
- Phase Contrast
- - the optical technique used to view the
structure of transparent objects whose varying but invisible
differences in thickness result in differences in the phase of
transmitted light. This is done when the transmitted light changes its
optical path by about 1/3 wavelength.
- Polarizer
- - transparent material which can absorb
all vibrations of light passing through it except those in a single
plane.
- Rack and Pinion
- - term used to describe the gear system
for lowering and raising the stage or barrel when focusing. The coarse
adjustment control (knob), usually moves the barrel or stage.
- Refractive Index (R I )
- - the ratio of the speed of light in a
vacuum to its speed in some other medium. This will determine how much
light rays are bent. When using immersion objectives it is important
to keep the values as close together as possible.
- Resolution
- - a measure of the ability of a lens to
image closely spaced objects so they are recognized as separate
objects.
- Resolving power
- - the capacity of any optical system to
distinguish and separate details in a specimen.
- Retractable Objective (XR)
- - usually on the 40x and 100x
objectives, a spring is loaded inside the objective so that minimal
damage is done to the slide and the top element of the lens should it
be racked down beyond its normal stop.
- Runout
- The linear (versus angular) portion of
off-axis error. It is the deviation between ideal straight line motion
and actual measured motion in a translation stage. Runout has two
orthogonal components, straightness, a measure of in-plane deviation,
and flatness, the out-of-plane deviation.
- Spherical
Aberration
- - the failure of a lens system to image
the central and peripheral rays at the same focal point.
- Stage
- - the platform on the microscope where
the slide or specimen is placed. The stage may be square, circular,
fixed, rotating or even interchanged.
- Stage Focus
- - a specific type of focus where the
stage moves and the body tube is stationary when focusing.
- Straightness of Travel
- Deviation from straight line motion in a
horizontal plane. Also referred to as horizontal runout. This error is
usually traceable to an underlying angular error of the ways.
- Tilt and Wobble
- The angular portion of off-axis error.
It is the deviation between ideal straight line motion and actual
measured motion in a translation stage. Tilt and wobble have three
orthogonal components commonly referred to as roll, pitch, and yaw.
These terms usually dominate the overall error due to the geometry of
the motion system.
- Widefield Oculars (eyepieces)
- - a term referring to the size of the
field of view on the ocular. A wide field ocular may be 19
- -21mm compared to a lower measure.
- Working Distance
- - the distance between the cover glass
or object and the tip of the objective. This governs the allowable
movement of the objective in obtaining critical focus of the specimen.
- Yaw
- An angular deviation from ideal straight
line motion, in which the positioning tables rotates around the Z
(vertical) axis as it translates along its travel axis.
- Zoom
- - a lens system that provides for
variable magnification capability while keeping the specimen in focus.