Complete the following questions, save with your name and attach to the drop box for
 Read over the parts of the microscope and answer the following questions:
 1.	What do you call the lens you look through on the microscope?
 2.	What is the difference between the ocular lens and the objective lens?
 3.	Where do you place the slide on the microscope?
 4.	Which adjustment, course or fine, do you use when you are observing the highest power?
 5.	What would the total magnification be if you are looking through the ocular and using each of the following objectives.
 Ocular Objective	Total Magnification
 10x	4x	
 10x	10x	
 10x	40x	
 
 Experiment 1, Virtual Magnification Procedure, How Big Is It? After completion answer the following questions:
 1.	At what magnification do you first notice the ragweed pollen?
 
 
 
 2.	Which is bigger, a rhinovirus or E. Coli?
 
 
 
 3.	Based on the magnification, how many of the E. Coli can fit into the same space as the head of a pin?
 
 
 
 4.	About how many red blood cells could fit across the diameter of a human hair (again, look at the magnification scale)?
 
 
 Experiment 2, Virtual Microscope Procedure. After completion answer the following questions:
 1.	What is the first step normally taken when you look through the ocular lenses?
 
 
 2.	What is the highest objective lens you can use to see the entire letter e?
 
 
 3.	The nuclei (the structure inside a cell that contains DNA) of the  cheek cells have been stained using a special dye so that they appear  purple. What shape are they?
 
 
 4.	At high magnification, you may notice that not all of the nuclei in  the onion root tip slide appear as the shape you described in the  question above. What do they look like?
 
 
 5.	After completing the m1 exercise in the "Try this" section, how tall is the letter e?