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Objectives (1 of 2). Students should gain an understanding of:The parts of a compound microscope and how it worksThe use of a comparison microscope to compare two objectsThe large working distance and the larger depth of field afforded by the stereomicroscopeDifferentiation of amorphous and crystalline materials by use of a polarized light microscope.
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1. Chapter 4 The Microscope and Forensic Identification of Hair and Fibers
2. Objectives (1 of 2) Students should gain an understanding of:
The parts of a compound microscope and how it works
The use of a comparison microscope to compare two objects
The large working distance and the larger depth of field afforded by the stereomicroscope
Differentiation of amorphous and crystalline materials by use of a polarized light microscope
3. Objectives (2 of 2) The structure of hair and the microscopy techniques used to identify human hair
The characteristics of natural fibers, human-made fibers, and the fabrics made with both types of fibers
The use of microspectrophotometers and scanning electron microscopes in the forensic lab
4. Introduction Trace evidence: small, often microscopic, objects that are readily transferred between people and places
Microscopic comparison of fibers and hairs: started at the FBI laboratory in the early 1930s
Capabilities of forensic laboratories: greatly expanded with the development of modern analytical instruments
5. Magnifying Small Details Forensic scientists need to analyze many different types of materials
Early labs relied on the light microscope
This microscope offered less than 10 times magnification
6. Refraction Refraction: magnifying glass bends (refracts) light rays as they pass through air and back through the lens
Focal length: depends on the change in refractive index
Refractive index: ratio of the velocity of light in a vacuum to the velocity of light in any other medium
7. Types of Microscopes (1 of 9) A microscope has at least two lenses:
Objective (lower) lens: produces a magnified and inverted version of the object
Ocular (smaller) lens: produces a virtual image in the viewer’s brain
Magnifying power = power of the objective lens × power of the ocular lens
The ability to distinguish extremely small objects depends on the wavelength of light used to illuminate the object
8. Types of Microscopes (2 of 9) Compound microscopes have six parts:
Base: stand on which it sits
Arm: support for the tube body
Body tube: hollow tube that holds the objective and eyepiece lenses
Stage: platform that supports the specimen
Coarse adjustment: knob that focuses the microscope by raising and lowering the body tube
Fine adjustment: knob that adjusts the height of the body tube in smaller increments
9. Types of Microscopes (3 of 9) The optical system of a compound microscope has four parts:
Illuminator: electric lighting (e.g., tungsten, fluorescent, halogen)
Condenser: part that focuses light rays through a lens at the center of the stage
Eyepiece: part you look through
Objective: second lens of the microscope
A higher numerical aperture (NA) allows for more detail
Anything beyond 1000× is considered “empty magnification”
10. Types of Microscopes (4 of 9) Comparison microscopes
Are used to compare two specimens
Consist of two compound microscopes connected by an optical bridge
Provide a single eyepiece through which the examiner sees both images side by side
Can be lighted from below the stage or via a vertical or reflected illumination system
11. Types of Microscopes (5 of 9) Stereoscopic microscopes
Are the most commonly used microscope in crime labs
Include two eyepieces
Produce a three-dimensional image with a right-side-up, frontward orientation
Offer a large working distance
Can be lighted from below or vertically from above
12. Types of Microscopes (6 of 9) Polarizing microscopes
Can provide information on the shape, color, and size of minerals
Can distinguish between isotropic and anisotropic materials
Include two polarizing filters, a polarizer lens (fixed below the specimen), and an analyzer lens (fixed above the specimen)
Through analysis of plane-polarized light, can determine whether the sample exhibits pleochroism
Are used to identify human-made fibers and paint
13. Types of Microscopes (7 of 9) Microspectrophotometers
Optical microscopes have been attached to spectrophotometers.
The lamp emits radiation that passed through the sample.
Light is separated according to its wavelength and the spectrum formed is observed with a detector.
These devices can determine the composition of unknown materials.
14. Types of Microscopes (8 of 9) Microspectrophotometers
Can measure the intensity of light reflected from a sample, the intensity of light emitted when a sample fluoresces, or the intensity of polarized light after it has interacted with a sample
Allow for more precise measurements of a sample while eliminating interference from surrounding material
Are useful for analysis of synthetic fibers
15. Types of Microscopes (9 of 9) Scanning electron microscopes
Can magnify 100,000×
Have a depth of focus more than 300× that of an optical microscope
Use electrons rather than light
Offer much greater resolution than with a light microscope
16. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (1 of 8) An individual hair cannot result in definitive identification of a person unless it has a DNA tag attached.
Hair samples can exclude suspects.
Hair is often contributing evidence that connects a suspect to a crime scene or connects multiple crime scene areas to each other.
17. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (2 of 8) Hair is composed primarily of keratin, which makes hair resistant to physical change.
Each strand grows out of a follicle.
18. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (3 of 8) Three parts of a hair:
Cuticle: scales of hardened, flattened, keratinized tissue that are unique to animal species
Cortex: orderly array of cortical cells that allows for comparison of hair samples
Medulla: rows of dark-colored cells organized in a pattern specific to the animal species
19. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (4 of 8) Hair growth stages:
Anagenic: hair follicle is actively producing the hair; follicle is attached to the root
Catagenic: transition stage in which the root is pushed out of the follicle
Telogenic: hair naturally becomes loose and falls out
20. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (5 of 8) Ask two questions when hair evidence is found at a crime scene:
Is the hair human?
Does it match the hair of the suspect?
21. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (6 of 8) When analyzing hair, the investigator must:
Distinguish between animal and human hair
Assess the hair color, length, and diameter
Compare features of the hair samples, including their distribution, color, and shape of pigment granules
22. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (7 of 8) Collect hair evidence by hand
Wide, transparent sticky tape
Lint roller
Evidence vacuum cleaner
23. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Hair (8 of 8) Microscope examination might reveal two pieces of information:
Area of body from which the hair originated
Race of the hair’s owner
Microscopy cannot determine the age or sex of the hair’s owner.
24. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (1 of 8) Most fibers do not degrade at a crime scene.
Fibers are easily transferred from one object or person to another.
Fibers provide evidence of association between a suspect and a crime scene.
Fiber evidence must be carefully secured to avoid its loss or cross-contamination.
Most fiber evidence can only be placed within a class.
25. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (2 of 8) Natural fibers are derived from plant or animal sources.
Cotton is the most widely used natural fiber.
26. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (3 of 8) Yarn is classified into two types:
Filament: continuous length of human-made fiber
Spun: short lengths of fibers that are twisted or spun together
Physical properties of yarn include its texture, number of twists per inch, number of fibers per strand, blend of fibers, color, and pilling characteristics.
27. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (4 of 8) Woven fabrics consist of intertwining of two sets of yarns.
They are woven on a loom.
Basic weaves are plain, twill, and satin.
28. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (5 of 8) A wide variety of synthetic fibers have replaced natural fibers in fabrics, garments, and rugs.
There are two types of synthetic fibers:
Cellulosic: produced from cellulose-containing raw materials such as trees and plants
Synthetic: produced from chemicals made from refined petroleum or natural gas
29. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (6 of 8) Plastics: malleable materials easily formed into different products
Polymers: huge molecules formed by chemically linking together smaller molecules
Production of synthetic fibers:
Produced by melt spinning process
Shapes of holes in spinneret determine cross-sectional shape of the polymer
30. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (7 of 8) Step 1 in comparison of synthetic fibers: examination with a comparison microscope
Pay special attention to the fibers’ color, diameter, cross-section shape, pitting or striations, and presence of dulling agents
Advantages of comparison microscopy:
Fiber is not destroyed
Technique is not limited by the sample size
Microscopes are readily available
31. Forensic Applications of Microscopy: Fibers (8 of 8) Step 2 in comparison of synthetic fibers: analysis of chemical composition
Try to place fiber in a specific polymer subclass
Use refractive index to identify synthetic fibers