Main Microautoradiography and Electron Probe Analysis: Their Application to Plant Physiology

Microautoradiography and Electron Probe Analysis: Their Application to Plant Physiology

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In biological literature, several definitions of quantitative autoradio­ graphy are given. The term is defined as either the determination and com­ parison of the density of silver grains above various structures or under varying conditions, or the determination of absolute quantities of radio­ activity. In both these cases, photometric measurement serves for more rapid and more exact evaluation of grain densities than would be possible by visual counting of the grains. The equipment generally used for the photometric measurement of silver grains consists of a microscope, a photocell, an electronic amplifier system and a display unit. Grains can be made accessible to photometric evaluation by various kinds of microscopic illumination: 1. Substage bright-field illumination. 2. Substage dark-field illumination. 3. Incident dark-field illumination. 4. Vertical bright-field illumination. With all these types of illumination, the relationship between the luminous flux I absorbed by the film, scattered into the objective and reflected or diffracted, and the flux 10 which is not affected by the film is used as a measure of grain density. Since these are differential measurements, the light beam I transmitted by the film is in itself a measure of grain density if the luminous flux 10 incident on the grains is kept constant. This approach has been used in a large number of measuring setups.


Request Code : ZLIBIO983086
Categories:
Year:
1972
Edition:
1
Publisher:
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Language:
English
Pages:
242
ISBN:
978-3-540-05950-9,978-3-642-87496-3
This book is not available due to the complaint of the copyright holder.

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