Q: What is the function of the arm on a microscope?
ANS >> It supports the body tube and lenses, and it's used to safely carry the
microscope.
Q: What does the base of a microscope do?
ANS >> It provides support for the whole microscope and adds stability with its wide,
heavy design.
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Q: What is the ocular or eyepiece on a microscope?
ANS >> The lens at the top that you look through. Single-ocular microscopes have one
eyepiece, while binocular ones have two.
Q: What is the body tube and what does it do?
ANS >> Connects the eyepiece to the objective lenses and contains mirrors or prisms
to direct light to the viewer’s eye.
Q: What is the revolving nosepiece (or turret)?
ANS >> A rotating part at the base of the body tube that holds the objective lenses and
allows you to switch between them.
Q: What are objective lenses and where are they located?
ANS >> Found on the rotating nosepiece, these lenses offer various magnifications
(commonly 4x, 10x, 40x, and oil immersion). Only one is used at a time.
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