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3.3 Light Microscopy: The Basics
3.3.1 MAGNIFICATION
The prime function of a light microscope is to magnify features in a biological sample, which
are illuminated by VIS light, while maintaining acceptable levels of image clarity, contrast,
and exhibiting low optical aberration effects. Magnification can be performed most effi
ciently using a serial combination of lenses. In a very crude form, a single lens is in effect
a very simple light microscope but offering limited magnification. In its most simple prac
tical form, a light microscope consists of a high numerical aperture (NA) objective lens
placed very close to the sample, with a downstream imaging lens focusing the sample image
onto a highly sensitive light detector such as a high-efficiency charge-coupled device (CCD)
camera, or sometimes a photomultiplier tube (PMT) in the case of a scanning system such
as in confocal microscopy (Figure 3.2a). Most microscopes are either upright (objective lens
positioned above the sample stage) or inverted (objective lens positioned below the sample
stage).
The two-lens microscope operates as a simple telescope system, with magnification M
given by the ratio of the imaging lens focal length to that of the objective lens (the latter typ
ically being a few millimeters):
FIGURE 3.2 Light microscopy methods. (a) Magnification in the simplest two-lens light
microscope. (b) Back focal plane detection (magnification onto quadrant photodiode is f2/f1
where fn is the corresponding focal length of lens Ln). (c) Laser dark field. (d) Phase retardation
of light through a cell sample in phase contrast microscopy.