Lab 2, Microscope Calculations - Lab Manual, 22 Final Version
Lab 2, Microscope Calculations - Lab Manual, 22 Final Version
Lab 2, Microscope Calculations - Lab Manual, 22 Final Version
Calculation of total magnification, the diameter of the field of view, estimation of object size, drawing
magnification, drawing a scale bar
Objectives
To calculate the total magnification of an object viewed through the ocular lens
To calculate the diameter of the field of view at scanning, low and high power objectives
To draw a biological drawing
To estimate the size of an object
To estimate the magnification of the drawing
To draw a scale bar
To calculate the magnification of the drawing and estimate the size of the object using a scale bar
Procedure
View the following videos from the links given below before coming to the lab
To learn the rules of biological drawing, conversion of units of cell measurements, and drawing a scale bar,
view the video ‘Drawing Scaled Diagrams of Cells’ from the link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4c5539urfyM
To learn how to calculate total magnification and know the relationship between Magnification, Actual size,
and Image size, view the video ‘IGCSE. 2.3 Calculating magnification of drawings’
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPwhJ8FJ9LU&t=61s
To learn how to calculate the field of view, view the video ‘Microscope measurements’
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=An5Aq3GqRmM
Size of cells
Cells are small for practical reasons and the units of measurement used in cytology are micrometres (µm) and
nanometres (nm).
When you are seeing an object through the eyepieces of a compound microscope, the image that you are
actually seeing is being magnified twice: by the eyepieces and the objective lens you are using to view an
object.
Therefore, you need to know how to calculate the total magnification of an object seen when using the
compound microscope.
The total magnification of an object observed through the eyepieces (ocular lens) is calculated by multiplying
the ocular lens magnification, which is usually 10X times the magnification of the objective lens being
used (either: 4X, 10X, 20X, 40X, 100X, etc.). “X” is placed after obtaining the total magnification.
Example:
The formulae for Total Magnification (T.M) = Ocular lens magnification x objective lens magnification
Ocular lens magnification = 10X Objective lens magnification being used = 4X
What is the total magnification?
Calculation: T.M. = (10X) x (4X) = 40X
To estimate the field of view under the scanning objective, you have to place a transparent ruler on the
microscope stage and count the number of divisions on the ruler spanning the FOV.
Looking at the diagram below, the diameter of the field of view under scanning objective lens (4X) with a Total
Magnification of 40X is approximately 4mm.
Calculating the diameter of the field of view (dFOV) for low power objective (100x) or high power
objective (400x)
There is a relationship between the diameter of field of view of a specific objective lens with the diameter of the
field of view of another objective lens.
dFOV of scanning X magnification of scanning lens =dFOV of low power objective X magnification of low power objective
similarly
dFOV of scanning X magnification of scanning lens =dFOV of high power objective X magnification of high power objective
Since we have already estimated the diameter of the field of view for the scanning lens and it shows to be 4mm,
then we can use this information to calculate the diameter of field of view of either the low power or high power
objective lenses.
For the low power objective (10x)
dFOV of scanning x magnification of scanning lens = dFOV of high power objective x magnification of high power objective
Transpose the 10x to the left and the unknown, which the dFOV low power, remains to the right
Convert the 1.6 mm to um, i.e multiply by 1000. Will give 1600 um.
Therefore, dFOV of low power = 1600 um.
Knowing the dFOV allows you to find the size of the object you are observing. To estimate the object size, you
will first need to estimate how many times the object fits across the dFOV. Looking at the example below, you
can estimate that the object fits across our dFOV 2.25 times at high power.
Once you have determined the dFOV, you can estimate the size of the object you are viewing under the
microscope. To find the object size you will have to estimate how many times the object fits across the dFOV.
If you are asked to draw a diagram of the object you are observing, you can calculate the drawing
magnification. This is the number of times your drawing has been enlarged relative to the true size of the
object. To calculate the drawing magnification, use the following equation:
𝑑𝑟𝑎𝑤𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑠𝑖𝑧𝑒
𝐷𝑟𝑎𝑤𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑚𝑎𝑔𝑛𝑖𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 =
𝑜𝑏𝑗𝑒𝑐𝑡 𝑠𝑖𝑧𝑒
Note: this equation requires the drawing size and object size to have the same units of measurement.
Example:
If a student draws an image of the animal cell that he/she observed under the microscope and the animal cell
was 200 µm in size (this is the estimated size of the object) under the microscope and his/her drawing on his/her
lab notebook is 3 cm (3000 µm) in size (this is the final size of the object), how many times has he/she enlarged
the object?
Answer: x = 3000 µm / 200 µm = 15. Therefore, after drawing the image in his/her notebook, the magnification
of the image is x15.
A scaled diagram is a scientific drawing of a specimen (cell in this case) that has an appropriate scale to
indicate its actual size. A scale bar is a straight line that represents the relationship between the space on your
page and the actual space occupied by the specimen. Draw a 1cm line below the drawing.
The bacterial cell shown below has a scale bar of 10mm (1cm) = 1 µm
Using the scale bar, you can calculate the magnification of the image or drawing and estimate the size of
the specimen.
6. How to calculate the magnification (x) of an image or drawing using a scale bar?
From the example below, the actual length of the scale bar is 100µm
100µm
7. How to calculate the size of a specimen using its scale bar?
So, by cross-multiplication
Actual size of beetle unknow = 83mm of the object in picture x 100µm of actual size
32 mm in picture
= 259.375 µm