The key features of cells and their functions - OCR 21st CenturyCell measurement

All living organisms are made of cells. Some contain only one cell. Others are multicellular and contain many cells.

Part of Biology (Single Science)You and your genes

Cell measurement

Greg Foot explains the main differences between light and electron microscopes

Light microscopes

Most animal cells range in size from 10 - 50 μm, and plant cells from 10 - 100 μm.

The human eye can see objects as small as 50 μm. We require a microscope to see cells in further detail.

Microscopes magnify the image of a specimen - a cell, tissue, etc. - so that it appears larger. The type of microscope you use in a school laboratory is as a .

Microscopes magnify the image of a specimen – cells, tissues of other structures – so that it appears larger. The type of microscope you have used in the school laboratory is a compound microscope.
Figure caption,
Most school microscopes now have built in light source, but some may have a mirror to reflect light instead

Calculating the magnification of the microscope

The compound microscope uses two lenses to magnify the specimen – the and an .

In most microscopes, there is a choice of objective lenses to use. can therefore be varied according to the size of the specimen to be viewed and the level of detail required.

The magnification of a lens is shown by a multiplication sign followed by the amount the lens magnifies, eg ×10.

So, if the magnification of an eyepiece is ×10 and the objective is ×4, the magnification of the microscope is:

magnification of eyepiece × magnification of objective = 10 × 4 = 40.

Question

If the magnification of an eyepiece is ×10 and the objective is ×40, what is the magnification of the microscope?

Calculating the magnification of an image

Microscopes use lenses to magnify the image of a biological specimen so that it appears larger. Photographs can be taken through a microscope. Sometimes you may be asked to make measurements from a photograph in order to calculate the actual size of an organelle or its magnification.

The formula to calculate magnification is:

\( \text{magnification} = \frac{size~of~image}{real~size~of~object}\)