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October 2009

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Confocal Microscopy List <[log in to unmask]>
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Thu, 8 Oct 2009 21:16:46 +1100
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But is this image truly in focus?  If you adjust the microscope focus, does it get sharper?
 
                                                               Guy
 


________________________________

From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Eyepiece and virtual image


Dear Guy,
The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
Joachim 

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:



	You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube.  If you see a sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!
	
	                                                                   Guy
	
	
	
	Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
	by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
	    http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
	______________________________________________
	Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
	Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
	University of Sydney, NSW 2006
	______________________________________________
	Phone +61 2 9351 3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
	Mobile 0413 281 861
	______________________________________________
	     http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>  
	
	 
	
	
________________________________

	From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
	Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
	To: [log in to unmask]
	Subject: Eyepiece and virtual image
	
	
	
	
	Dear all,
	
	I have a -maybe stupid- and not confocal but "basic optic" question:
	
	As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
	This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
	So far, so good. 
	By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
	Thanks for your input!
	
	Joachim
	
	
	Joachim Hehl
	LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
	Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
	CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland
	
	Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
	Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
	Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
	Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
	e-mail: [log in to unmask]
	
	
	



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