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THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE

A description is given of quantitative methods using the electron microscope which can be applied to specimens with much smaller dimensions than those which can be used with the established cytochemical methods based on the use of the interference microscope and the techniques of ultraviolet and x-r...

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Autores principales: Burge, R. E., Silvester, N. R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1960
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2224912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13688991
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author Burge, R. E.
Silvester, N. R.
author_facet Burge, R. E.
Silvester, N. R.
author_sort Burge, R. E.
collection PubMed
description A description is given of quantitative methods using the electron microscope which can be applied to specimens with much smaller dimensions than those which can be used with the established cytochemical methods based on the use of the interference microscope and the techniques of ultraviolet and x-ray absorption. A discussion of electron scattering shows that under chosen operating conditions in the electron microscope the effective total mass-scattering coefficient S of a specimen is almost independent of its chemical composition. An order-of-magnitude agreement is observed at four accelerating voltages between experimental total scattering cross-sections for polystyrene and theoretical values for carbon. The contrast in a micrograph taken under standardised conditions is interpreted in terms of differences in specimen mass-thickness. The measurement of mass, thickness, and density of discrete particles and thin sections in the absence of sublimation is discussed in terms of relevant object models on the assumption of a constant, experimentally determined, value of S. The validity of the proposed methods was examined by measuring the masses of the heads of ram spermatozoa (about 7 x 10(-12) gm.) and T2 bacteriophage (about 3 x 10(-16) gm.) in the electron microscope. The values agreed reasonably well with those found by interference microscopy and sedimentation-diffusion measurements, respectively. Errors in S and magnification due to contamination and their effects on the results are considered in detail. An application of the methods to a typical electron microscope specimen was demonstrated by measuring the mass of heads of the T2 bacteriophage after staining with uranyl acetate. Errors of measurement are discussed and a minimal measurable mass estimated. Further applications of quantitative electron microscopy are proposed.
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spelling pubmed-22249122008-05-01 THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE Burge, R. E. Silvester, N. R. J Biophys Biochem Cytol Article A description is given of quantitative methods using the electron microscope which can be applied to specimens with much smaller dimensions than those which can be used with the established cytochemical methods based on the use of the interference microscope and the techniques of ultraviolet and x-ray absorption. A discussion of electron scattering shows that under chosen operating conditions in the electron microscope the effective total mass-scattering coefficient S of a specimen is almost independent of its chemical composition. An order-of-magnitude agreement is observed at four accelerating voltages between experimental total scattering cross-sections for polystyrene and theoretical values for carbon. The contrast in a micrograph taken under standardised conditions is interpreted in terms of differences in specimen mass-thickness. The measurement of mass, thickness, and density of discrete particles and thin sections in the absence of sublimation is discussed in terms of relevant object models on the assumption of a constant, experimentally determined, value of S. The validity of the proposed methods was examined by measuring the masses of the heads of ram spermatozoa (about 7 x 10(-12) gm.) and T2 bacteriophage (about 3 x 10(-16) gm.) in the electron microscope. The values agreed reasonably well with those found by interference microscopy and sedimentation-diffusion measurements, respectively. Errors in S and magnification due to contamination and their effects on the results are considered in detail. An application of the methods to a typical electron microscope specimen was demonstrated by measuring the mass of heads of the T2 bacteriophage after staining with uranyl acetate. Errors of measurement are discussed and a minimal measurable mass estimated. Further applications of quantitative electron microscopy are proposed. The Rockefeller University Press 1960-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2224912/ /pubmed/13688991 Text en Copyright © Copyright 1961 by The Rockefeller Institute Press
spellingShingle Article
Burge, R. E.
Silvester, N. R.
THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title_full THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title_fullStr THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title_full_unstemmed THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title_short THE MEASUREMENT OF MASS, THICKNESS, AND DENSITY IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE
title_sort measurement of mass, thickness, and density in the electron microscope
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2224912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13688991
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