Chapter 4
Capturing Images
10
4.2
4.2
Tips on Micrographing
4.2.1
4.2.1
Setting the Environment for Micrographing
When you have attached this product to a microscope, set up the environment for micrographing referring to the following
description.
(1) Setting Up the Environment
Adjusting the brightness of the environment
When you micrograph a dark specimen by a fluorescent microscope, the light in the room may come into the
illumination optical path of the microscope; do the micrographing after making the room dark.
Cover the binocular section by the caps to shut the light out.
Preventing tremor
Micrographing is made with a high resolution so that a little tremor affects the image quality. Place the microscope on
a backlash-free robust desk standing on a stable floor, so that a tremor does not reach the microscope.
You can reduce the impact of tremors by using a vibration isolation table that suits your microscope. Be careful,
especially during micrographing, not to touch the table on which the microscope is placed.
(2) Setting Up the Microscope Condition
Using an appropriate filter
For color images:
Insert an NCB filter in the optical path.
For monochrome images:
Insert a filter that suits the photographing purpose in the optical path.
Generally, a GIF (Green Interference) filter achieves a good contrast. Using a filter of the complementary color of the
specimen makes the contrast sharp.
Using a filter
The way a filter is inserted and removed depends on the microscope. Refer to the manual of your
microscope.
A third-party color compensation filter (CC filter) can be inserted into the illumination optical path of the
microscope to compensate for changes in color balance caused by the length of the exposure time.
When using a phase contrast microscope or an interference microscope (two luminous fluxes or multiple
luminous fluxes), you can enhance contrast using a green interference filter (GIF) or a monochrome
interference filter (IF).
We recommend that you use both an NCB filter and GIF (green interference) filter for DS-Qi2.
Some microscope model may require a heat-wave absorbing filter.
NCB filter
An NCB (neutral color balance) filter is a color-balancing compensation filter used to adjust color
temperature to daylight values in microscopes that use a halogen bulb as a light source.
Complementary color
For example, green and magenta, red and cyan, and blue and yellow are all pairs of complementary colors.
When complementary colors overlap, their respective hues cancel each other out.
Setting the field diaphragm
Adjust the field diaphragm so that it circumscribes the viewfield. The field diaphragm has a significant impact on
contrast, especially for fluorescent specimens against dark backgrounds.
Note: For how to adjust the field diaphragm, refer to the instruction manual of your microscope.
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