Читать книгу Essays on the Microscope - George Comp Adams - Страница 35
THE GENERAL APPARATUS TO THIS MICROSCOPE IS AS FOLLOWS.
ОглавлениеFirst, such as accompany the preceding microscope. The brass wheel with magnifiers, P, Fig. 2. The slider-holder, K. The brass pin and arm, a, for receiving the concave speculum, e, which is applied to the upper side of the stage, and used common to all the magnifiers. The silver concave speculum, f, with a magnifier set therein, used by itself in the arm C D. These two speculums form the instrument into what is called an OPAKE MICROSCOPE.
A brass cone, g, fitting the under side of the stage, N I S, to exclude superfluous light. The illuminator, or convex lens, d, Fig. 1, fitted to T of the stage. The jointed nippers, b, fitted to the stage, and either on the point or nippers to hold any small insect, or other opake object. An ivory black and white piece, h, is also fitted to the point to contrast the colour of any object laid thereon; the light upon this is reflected from the silver concaves placed above, which reflect the light downwards received from the mirrors at O. Six ivory sliders as shewn at i, containing a selection of objects, placed between Muscovy talc, and fastened by spring wires; and a brass frame slider, k: all for the stage, K, when in use. A set of glass tubes for fish or liquids, l, to be filled with water and stopped with cork, for the slider-holder K. A pan, c, for fish or frogs, fitted to the stage at S. A small ivory box, m, with spare talcs and wires. The explorator, n, a lens set in a brass cell, for viewing the larger sort of objects either by the hand, or from the arm C D, Fig. 2. A plane glass, o, and a concave ditto, s, both fitted to the hole of the stage, N I S, for viewing fluids, and confining the animalcula, &c. between them, and so forming what is called the AQUATIC MICROSCOPE.
A brass box, p, with a concave and plane glass, for insects and other objects, fitted to the stage N I S, when they are to be examined by the instrument. A pair of brass forceps, q, to take or hold any object by. A camel hair brush, t.