CHAPTER III
Examination of Objects—Principles of Illumination—Mirror and its Action—Substage Condenser—Use of Bull’s-eye—Opaque Objects—Photography of Microscopic Objects.
So much depends upon a right method of employing the microscope, as regards both comfort and accuracy, that we propose to devote a little space to the consideration of the subject.
Let us first warn the intending observer against the use of powers higher than are required to bring out the details of the object. Mere magnification is of very little use: it increases the difficulties both of illumination and of manipulation, and, as already said, interferes with that grasp of the object which it is most desirable to obtain. Rather let the beginner lay himself out to get the very most he can out of his lowest powers, and he will find that, by so doing, he will be able far better to avail himself of the higher ones when their use is indispensable.
The essential means to this end is a mastery of the principles of illumination, which we now proceed to describe.
We suppose the microscope to be inclined at an angle of about 70° to the horizontal, with a low-power objective attached to it, a one-inch by preference. Opposite to the microscope, and about a foot away from it, is a lamp with the edge of the flame presented to the microscope, the concave mirror of which is so arranged as to receive the rays from the flame and direct them up the tube of the microscope. Upon the stage is placed a piece of ground-glass, and the mirror-arm is now to be moved up or down upon its support until the ground-glass receives the maximum of illumination, which it will do when the lamp-flame is at one conjugate focus of the mirror and the ground-glass at the other. The focus will not be an image of the flame, but a bar of light.
If an object be now placed upon the stage, instead of the ground-glass, and the objective focused upon it, it will, if the mirror be properly adjusted, be brilliantly illuminated.
It will be understood that every concave mirror has a focus, and converges the rays which fall upon it to this focus, behaving exactly like a convex lens. The principal focus of a concave mirror is its radius of curvature, and this is not difficult to determine. Place side by side a deep cardboard box and the lamp, so that the concave mirror may send the rays back, along a path only slightly inclined to that by which they reached it, to the bottom of the box. The lamp and box being equidistant from the mirror, it is evident that when the mirror forms an image of the former upon the latter equal to the flame in size, we have the equivalent of the equal conjugate foci shown in Fig. 2. Now move the box to the distance from the mirror which corresponds to the distance of the stage of the microscope from the mirror when the latter is in position upon the microscope, and then move the lamp to or fro until the mirror casts a sharp image of the flame upon the bottom of the box, which is not to be moved. The lamp distance so found will be the correct one for working with the concave mirror. The writer is led to lay special stress upon this matter, from the fact that he almost invariably finds that the mirror is arranged to be used for parallel rays, i.e. for daylight, and is therefore fixed far too close to the stage to be available for correct or advantageous working with the lamp, unless, indeed, the bull’s-eye condenser be used, as hereinafter described, to parallelise the rays from the lamp.
Work done with the concave mirror can, however, under the most favourable conditions, only be looked upon as a pis aller. The advantages gained by the use of some substage condenser, even the most simple, in conjunction with the plane mirror, or even without any mirror at all, are so manifold that the beginner is strongly urged to provide himself with some form or other of it, and we now proceed to describe the way in which this should be used to produce the best effect.
To reduce the problem to its most simple elements, turn the mirror altogether out of the way, and place the microscope upon a block at such a height as shall be convenient for observation, and shall allow the rays from the lamp, placed in a line with it on the table, to shine directly into the tube of the microscope. Ascertain that this is so by removing both objective and eye-piece and looking down the tube, when the flame should be seen in the centre, edgewise. Now replace the eye-piece, and screw on to the tube the one-inch combination or objective. Place upon the stage an object, preferably a round diatom or an echinus-spine, and focus it as sharply as possible. Now place the substage condenser in its jacket, and slide it up and down until the image of the object is bisected by the image of the flame.
The centre of the object will now be brilliantly illuminated by rays travelling in the proper direction for yielding the best results. The object is situated at the common focus of the microscope and the condenser, and, whatever means of illumination be adopted, this is the result which should always be aimed at.
Satisfactory as this critical arrangement is, however, from a scientific point of view, it has its drawbacks from an artistic and æsthetic one. It is not pleasant, for most purposes, to have merely the centre of an object lighted up, and we have now to consider how the image of the edge of the flame may be so expanded as to fill the field without sacrificing more than a very small fraction of the accuracy of the arrangement just attained.
Referring to Fig. 1, we see that if we place the lamp at the principal focus of a lens, it will emit a bundle of parallel rays equal in diameter to the diameter of the lens. This is the key of the position. We cannot place the lamp at an infinite distance from the substage condenser, but we can supply the latter with rays approximately parallel, so that it shall bring them to a focus upon the object at very nearly its own principal focus. This we do by means of the bull’s-eye condenser. Place the latter, with its flat side toward the edge of the flame, and at its principal focal distance (the method of determining which has already been described) from the latter, so that the bundle of parallel rays which issue from it may pass up to the substage condenser. On examining the object again, it will be found that, after slight adjustments of the position of the bull’s-eye have been made, the object lies in the centre of an evenly and brilliantly lighted field.
It may be necessary to place the bull’s-eye a little farther from or nearer to the lamp, or to move it a little to one side or the other, but when it is at the correct distance, and on the central line between the lamp and the substage condenser, at right angles to this line, the effects will be as described. It may help in securing this result if we mention that when the bull’s-eye is too far from the lamp, the image of the flame is a spindle-shaped one; whilst, when the distance between the two is too short, i.e. less than the principal focal length of the lens, the field is crossed by a bar or light, the ends of which are joined by a ring, whilst on either side of the bar there is a semi-circular dark space.
We have hitherto supposed the objects viewed to be transparent, but there are many, of great interest, which are opaque, and call for other means of illumination. Of these there are several. The simplest and, in many ways, the best is to use the bull’s-eye condenser to bring to a focus upon the object the rays of light from some source placed above the stage of the microscope. If light can be obtained from the sun itself, no lens will be needed to concentrate it; and indeed, if this were done, there would be considerable risk of burning the object. The light from a white cloud, however, with the help of the bull’s-eye, answers