Difference between revisions of "Team:Cambridge-JIC/Measurement"
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<h3> Inverting the Lens: Why and How: </h3> | <h3> Inverting the Lens: Why and How: </h3> | ||
− | <p>The way a camera works is by focusing an image of a distant large object as a small set of points onto the CCD, which is positioned close to the lens (in its focal plane). Theoretically however, it might as well do the opposite (because light paths are reversible – a well known and intuitive physical principle): that is, inspect the CCD pixels and project their greatly enlarged image onto a distant screen. <br>The lens has a small aperture (1.25mm) at one end, and a larger one (4mm) offering a wider view angle at the other, which is required for viewing close up objects. This is normally oriented towards the CCD. <img src="//2015.igem.org/wiki/images/6/64/CamJIC-MicroscopeDiagram.JPG"> | + | <p>The way a camera works is by focusing an image of a distant large object as a small set of points onto the CCD, which is positioned close to the lens (in its focal plane). Theoretically however, it might as well do the opposite (because light paths are reversible – a well known and intuitive physical principle): that is, inspect the CCD pixels and project their greatly enlarged image onto a distant screen. <br>The lens has a small aperture (1.25mm) at one end, and a larger one (4mm) offering a wider view angle at the other, which is required for viewing close up objects. This is normally oriented towards the CCD. <img src="//2015.igem.org/wiki/images/a/a2/CamJIC-CameraDiagram.JPG" height=200px> <img src="//2015.igem.org/wiki/images/6/64/CamJIC-MicroscopeDiagram.JPG" height=200px> |
(image) | (image) | ||
<br>So, if we want to image a sample on a microscope slide, we need to:</p><p><ul> | <br>So, if we want to image a sample on a microscope slide, we need to:</p><p><ul> |
Revision as of 11:31, 30 July 2015