Читать книгу Essays on the Microscope - George Comp Adams - Страница 45

DESCRIPTION OF THE TRANSPARENT SOLAR MICROSCOPE AND APPARATUS. Plate VI. Fig. 4, to 14.

Оглавление

Table of Contents

The foregoing description will, in great part, answer for this microscope; but, the dimensions, apparatus, &c. varying in a small degree from the preceding, a distinct description here, may be acceptable to those, who possess this sort of microscope only.

A B C D, Fig. 4, represents the body of the microscope, consisting of two brass tubes. E F is the end of the inner moveable tube; e f, that of the single tooth and pinion microscope. Fig. 5, screws into the end of this inner tube; at the end, A B, of the external tube there is a convex lens, to receive the sun’s rays from the mirror, K L, and to condense them on the object; the end, A B, screws into the circular plate, G H I. This part may also be used as a single microscope, and may have at m the handle, c, screwed to it. K L, a long frame fixed to the moveable circular plate, with a plane mirror, to reflect the rays of the sun on the lens at A B. An endless worm or screw, which is cut on the lower part of the nut, M, works in a small wheel which is fixed to the frame, K L, so that by turning the nut, the frame, K L, is moved up or down: the nut, N, moves the mirror to the right or left. O, P, two screws to fasten the square plate to the window-shutter.

Fig. 5, the single microscope; e f, the end which screws on to the part, E F, Fig. 4, of the internal tube of the body; q, the dove-tailed slit for receiving the slider, Fig. 8; g, the hole in which the megalascope magnifier, Fig. 6, is to be screwed, when the slider, Fig. 8, is removed. At h, are the moveable plates, between which the object sliders are placed; under the lowermost of these, the lens represented at Fig. 11 is to be placed, when the magnifiers in the slider, Fig. 8, are to be used, a k is a small piece of rack-work, which is moved backwards and forwards by the pinion fixed to the milled nut, b; by the gradual motion of this rack, the objects are adjusted to the foci of the different lenses. Fig. 8 is a brass slider, with six lenses, or magnifying glasses; it is to be inserted into the hole at q; either of the magnifiers may be placed before the object, by sliding it one way or the other: you may perceive when the glass is in the center of the eye-hole by a small spring acting upon a notch which is made on the side of the slider opposite to each lens.

Essays on the Microscope

Подняться наверх