Laboratory Manual For Human Anatomy & Physiology
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781260159363
Author: Martin, Terry R., Prentice-craver, Cynthia
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.
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Question
Chapter 5, Problem 2.1A
Summary Introduction
To explain:
Cellular components of cheek cell.
Introduction:
The cheek cells are squamous epithelial cells that form the outer epithelial layer of the mouth. A squamous epithelial cell is a large flattened cell with abundant cytoplasm and small round central nucleus.
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Group of answer choices
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Chapter 5 Solutions
Laboratory Manual For Human Anatomy & Physiology
Ch. 5 - Which of the following cellular structures is not...Ch. 5 - Which of the following cellular structures is...Ch. 5 - The outer boundary of a cell is the mitochondrial...Ch. 5 - Microtubules, intermediate filaments, and...Ch. 5 - Easily attainable living cells observed in this...Ch. 5 - A slide of human cheek cells can be stained to...Ch. 5 - Cellular energy is stored in ER. ATP. DNA. RNA.Ch. 5 - The smooth ER possesses ribosomes. True...Ch. 5 - The nuclear envelope contains nuclear pores. True...Ch. 5 - The cells lining the inside of the cheek are...
Ch. 5 - Figure 5.4 Label the indicated cellular structure...Ch. 5 - Match the cellular components in column A with the...Ch. 5 - Prob. 2.1ACh. 5 - Prob. 2.2ACh. 5 - What do the various types of cells in these...Ch. 5 - What are the main differences you observed among...Ch. 5 - Prob. 3.4ACh. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...Ch. 5 - Electron micrographs represent extremely thin...
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- A student has a compound microscope equipped with 10X ocular lenses and 4X, 10X, 40X and 100X objective lenses. The student has a slide with cells that are -100 microns (1 micron = 103 mm) in diameter, and wants to view a magnified image of a %3D cell so that the cell appears to be 10 mm in diameter. Which objective lens should the student use? O 10X O 40X O 100X O 4X Question 7 2 ptsarrow_forwarda. Why must you slowly turn the fine adjustment knob? b. Is natural light or is artificial light used when using the microscope?arrow_forwardA. Purpose: Figure 1 B. Materials: Microscope Magazine Slides and cover slips Paper towels Pipette Scissors C. Procedure: 1. Careful carry a microscope to your lab area. Make sure to hold it with one hand under the base and one hand on the arm as shown in Figure 1. 2. Plug the microscope in and turn it on. Take a moment to look at all the parts of the microscope. Then look at your ocular lens. What is the magnification of the ocular lens (eye piece)? Figure 2 3. Fill in the chart to show the total magnification for each objective lens. Magnification of Ocular Lens Magnification of Objective Lens Objective Lens Total Magnification Low Power Medium Power High Powerarrow_forward
- Let's say you placed the letter "e" slide on the microscope stage so that it is in the normal, correct orientation. You centered over the light source and under the objective. 1. How would it appear through the ocular lens after focusing? Describe what you would see. 100 in Click or tap here to enter text. Smaller 2. When you move the slide to the left with the stage controls, how does it appear to move through the ocular lens? Click or tap here to enter text.arrow_forwardHelp witharrow_forwardwrite e, m, n, and b each letter as it would appear under the microscope.arrow_forward
- Answer the following questions: Why are most cells so small? Why cell size is limited? List two instances when the coarse adjustment knob is never used Why is immersion oil used with the 100X objective? List two common problems associated with using the microscope and how you would go about solving it. When should the lenses be cleaned? What is the correct way to clean them?arrow_forwardA student has a compound microscope equipped with 10X ocular lenses and 4X, 10X, 40X and 100X objective lenses. The student has a slide with cells that are -100 microns (1 micron = 10 mm) in diameter, and wants to viewa magnified image of a cell so that the cell appears to be 10 mm in diameter. Which objective lens should the student use? 10X O 40X O 100X 0 4Xarrow_forwardShown below are several micrographs (images from microscopes) that were taken using different microscopy techniques. Write down what method of microscopy was used and why you thought so. Choices for microscopy techniques are: Transmitted Light Microscopy (techniques of brightfield, phase-contrast, darkfield, DIC all fall under this), Fluorescence Microscopy, Scanning Electron Microscopy, and Transmission Electron Microscopy.arrow_forward
- Match the terms on the left with its description _____ stage _____ocular lens ____Diaphragm _____adjustment focusing knob _____Body tube holds the microscope slide lens you look through, usually 10x power regulate the amount of light passing the specimen used to focus on specimen holds the eyepiece upper part of the microscope that contains optical components. holds the object lens magnifies specimen secures that slice to the stage condenses light from the light source into a narrow beam source of illumination magnifies an image 100x,arrow_forwardWrite in digital format please Describe the step-by-step process for taking micrographs on a transmission electron microscope.arrow_forward3D dimensionality is a limitation of the compound microscope. Depth of field, DOF, describes dimensionality form top to bottom and can be observed with colored cross threads. Observe the crossed thread slide on low power (4x), then on medium power (10x), then on high power (40x objective magnification). Which crossed fiber is on top? How do you know?arrow_forward
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