Associate Professor Kelly Burke
 

Kelly Burke, MS

College of the Canyons

Associate Professor of Biology
Lead Faculty of Microbiology and Online Biology
Phone 661-362-5313; Fax 661-362-5625 Department of Biological Sciences
kelly.burke@canyons.edu
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Information to help you with your class:

Ocular & Stage Micrometers

Calibrating an ocular micrometer is only reliable for one objective on one scope.  Changing the objective lens or using a different scope than your assigned scope may yield varying results.  Always calibrate your micrometers when using new objectives or different microscopes. 

Each division of the stage micrometer = .01mm. 

Formula:

[(# divisions counted on stage micrometer)(one division of the stage micrometer in mm)/(# divisions counted on ocular micrometer)][1000]


Image of ocular and stage micrometer scales. Image created by David R. Caprette (caprette@rice.edu), Rice University 11 May 2000.  Used with permission. Image retrieved June 2005 from http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~bioslabs/methods/microscopy/measuring.html
Image Created by David R. Caprette (caprette@rice.edu), Rice University 11 May 2000.  Used with permission.
Retrieved June 2005 from http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~bioslabs/methods/microscopy/measuring.html


Example 1:

.01mm stage micrometer
stage micrometer = 12 divisions to 22 divisions on the ocular micrometer

Step 1:  [(12)(.01)/(22)][1000]

Step 2:  (.12/22)(1000)

Step 3:  (.0055)(1000)

Equals:  5.5µm per ocular division
 

Example 2: 

.01mm stage micrometer
stage micrometer = 1 divisions to 7 divisions on the ocular micrometer

Step 1:  [(1)(.01)/(7)][1000]

Step 2:  (.01/7)(1000)

Step 3:  (.0014)(1000)

Equals:  1.4µm per ocular division
 

Problem 1:

You have calibrated your ocular micrometer.  Each division of the ocular micrometer equals 1.4µm.  You count 5 divisions of the ocular micrometer as the length of an individual specimen.  How long is this specimen?

Formula:  Total specimen length (x) = (length of one division of the ocular micrometer)(number divisions counted as length of an individual specimen).

Step 1:  x = (1.4µm)(5 divisions)

Step 2:  x = 7µm

Note:  In unknowns, if your organism is 7µm in length, does that length fall within the known lengths for the species you think you have? 

 

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Kelly C. Burke, MS
Associate Professor of Biology
Lead Faculty of Microbiology & Online Biology

College of the Canyons

Office ALLB-208
Phone 661.362-5313
Fax 661.362.5625
kelly.burke@canyons.edu
www.canyons.edu/users/burkek

Department of Biological Sciences

 

All content included with this media is, unless otherwise specified,
Copyright ©2003-2007 Kelly Burke; Department of Biological Sciences, College of the Canyons.  All Rights Reserved.

Department of Biological Sciences
College of the Canyons
Santa Clarita Community College District
26455 Rockwell Canyon Road
Santa Clarita, CA 91355
U.S.A.