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| Kelly Burke, MS |
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| 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 | ||
| [ Home] [COC] [Biology] [Computer Lab] [100] [221] | ||
Information to help you with your class: Ocular & Stage MicrometersCalibrating 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]
Example 1: .01mm stage 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 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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