

b 





c 





d 



.s' / 



CH. Ill] INTERPRETATION OF APPEARANCES 93 



small piece of glass about as thick as a slide. The second letter is 

 placed upon this and covered in like manner. The third letter is placed 

 upon the second thick cover and covered with an ordinary cover-glass. 

 The letters should be as near together as possible, but not over-lapping. 

 Employ the same ocular and objective as above (§ 130). 



Fig. 89. letters mounted in stairs to 

 show the order of coming into focus. 



a, b, c, d. The various letters indi- 

 cated by the oblique row of black marks in 

 sectional view. Slide. The glass slide on which the letters are mounted. 



Lower the tube till the objective almost touches the top letter, then 

 look into the microscope, and slowly focus up. The lowest letter will 

 first appear, and then, as it disappears, the middle one will appear, and 

 so on. Focus down, and the top letter will first appear, then the mid- 

 dle one, etc. The relative position of objects is determined exactly in 

 this way in practical work. 



For example, if one has a micrometer ruled on a cover-glass 15-25 

 hundredths mm. thick, it is not easy to determine with the naked eye 

 which is the ruled surface. But if one puts the micrometer under a 

 microscope and uses a 3 mm.(^ in.) objective, it is easily determined. 

 The cover should be laid on a slide and focused till the lines are sharp. 

 Now, without changing the focus in the least turn the cover over. If 

 it is necessary to focus up to get the lines of the micrometer sharp, the 

 lines are on the upper side. If one must focus down, the lines are on 

 the under surface. With a thin cover and delicate lines this method of 

 determining the position of the rulings is of considerable practical 

 importance. 



§ 134. Determination of the Form of Objects. — The procedure 

 is exactly as for the determination of the fo^m of large objects. That 

 is, one must examine the various aspects. For example, if one were 

 placed in front of a wall of some kind he could not tell whether it was 

 a simple wall or whether it was one side of a building unless in some 

 way he could see more than the face of the wall. In other words, in 

 order to get a correct notion of any body, one must examine more than 

 one dimension, — two for plane surfaces, three for solids. So for micro- 

 scopic objects, one must in some way examine more than one face. To 

 do this with small bodies in a liquid the bodies may be made to roll 

 over by pressing on one edge of the cover-glass. And in rolling over 

 the various aspects are presented to the observer. With solid bodies, 



