Magnification & Resolution (OCR AS Biology): Revision Note
Magnification formula
The magnification of an object can be calculated using the formula:
magnification = size of image ÷ size of real object
The magnification formula can be rearranged to allow the calculation of:
magnification (m)
size of image (i)
size of real object, often referred to as actual size (a)
Magnification equation triangle
An equation triangle allows the magnification formula to be rearranged easily
Converting units during magnification calculations
Different units of measurement are used to measure different objects:
The actual size of cells is typically measured using the micrometre (μm) scale
Internal cellular structures are sometimes measured in nanometers (nm)
The size of images is usually measured in centimetres (cm) or millimetres (mm)
Units of measurement relate to each other as follows:
1000 nm = 1 µm
1000 µm = 1 mm
1000 mm = 1 m
10 mm = 1 cm
When carrying out magnification calculations it is essential that all measurements have the same units, so unit conversions are often required
Units can be converted by multiplying or dividing by the relevant factor
Converting larger units to smaller units = multiply
Converting smaller units to larger units = divide
Note that magnification does not have units
Converting units diagram
Units of measurement can be converted by multiplying or dividing by the relevant factor
Worked Example
An image of an animal cell is 30 mm in size and it has been magnified by a factor of ×3000.
What is the actual size of the cell?
Worked Example
Step 1: Convert all units to µm
1 mm = 1000 µm, so converting mm to µm involves multiplying by 1000
50 × 1000 = 50 000
The actual thickness of the leaf is 2000 µm and the image size is 50 000 µm
Step 2: Calculate magnification using the formula
magnification = image size ÷ actual size
= 50 000 / 2000
= 25
So the magnification is ×25
Magnification & Resolution
Magnification
Magnification can be defined as:
The number of times larger an image is than the actual object
The ability of a microscope to magnify an object depends on the type of microscope, and on the features of the microscope itself
E.g. for a light microscope the magnification can be calculated by multiplying together the magnification of the eyepiece lens and the objective lens
Resolution
Resolution can be defined as:
The ability to distinguish separate points on an image as two separate objects
The higher the resolution, the shorter the distance at which the two objects can be clearly distinguished
The ability of a microscope to resolve two objects as separate points is dependent on the method of image generation:
Light microscopes: the resolution is limited by the wavelength of light
As light passes close to physical structures it is diffracted, meaning that light waves spread out
The closer the structures are to each other, the more the light waves overlap each other as they are diffracted
Points that are closer together than half the wavelength of visible light cannot be clearly distinguished from each other
Electron microscopes: the resolution is much higher because electrons have a smaller wavelength than visible light
The objects past which the electrons travel can therefore be much closer together before the diffracted beams overlap
Resolution diagram
The resolving power of an electron microscope is much greater than that of a light microscope; this is because electrons have a smaller wavelength than visible light
Comparing light and electron microscopes
Light microscopes:
have a maximum resolution of 200 nm
have a maximum useful magnification of around ×1500-2000
can be used for viewing living or dead specimens
are useful for looking at whole cells, small organisms and tissues within organs such as in leaves or skin
Electron microscopes:
have a maximum resolution of 0.5 nm (TEM) or 3-10 nm (SEM)
are capable of generating images with a magnification of more than ×500 000
TEMs are capable of higher magnification than SEMs due to their higher resolution
can only be used for viewing dead specimens
are useful for looking at organelles and viruses, as well as looking at whole cells in more detail
Light and electron microscopes comparison table
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You do not need to be able to recall the exact numbers for resolution and magnification in different types of microscope, but you must have an appreciation of how the values differ between light microscopes, TEMs and SEMs.
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