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  2. These Student-Friendly Microscopes Are Our Top Picks ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/editor-approved-microscopes-top...

    Compound Microscope. This beginner compound microscope has an impressive lineup of features found in models with a higher price point, including six magnification levels up to 1,000 times, three ...

  3. Foldscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foldscope

    The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation funded the "Ten Thousand Microscopes" project under which Prakash plans to give away 10,000 Foldscope kits to interested parties, including students for research. [5] [7] [8] The projects eventually expanded to 50,000 Foldscope kits. Those who received the kits were encouraged to share their experiences ...

  4. A. C. Gilbert Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._C._Gilbert_Company

    The A. C. Gilbert Company was an American toy company, once one of the largest in the world. Gilbert originated the Erector Set, which is a construction toy similar to Meccano in the rest of the world, and made chemistry sets, microscope kits, and a line of inexpensive reflector telescopes.

  5. Edmund Scientific Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Scientific_Corporation

    Edmund Scientific Corporation, based in Barrington, New Jersey, was founded in 1942 as a retailer of surplus optical parts like lenses.It later branched out into complete systems like telescopes and microscopes, and in the 1960s, a wide variety of science toys and kits.

  6. USB microscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_microscope

    A miniature USB microscope with inbuilt LED lights next to the lens at left. Sea salt crystals seen with a USB microscope. Table salt crystals seen with a USB microscope. The top side of a sage leaf seen with a USB microscope - trichomes are visible. The USB image of the underside of a sage leaf - more trichomes are visible on this side.

  7. James Hillier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hillier

    Born in Brantford, Ontario, the son of James and Ethel (Cooke) Hillier, he received a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics and Physics (1937), Master of Arts (1938), and a Ph.D (1941) from the University of Toronto, where, as a graduate student, he completed a prototype of the electron microscope that had been invented by Ernst Ruska.

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