What is the purpose of a cover slip?

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The purpose of a coverslip is to protect both the specimen and the microscope's objective lens from damage. It is essential for maintaining the integrity of the lens, as moisture can compromise the seal around the lens unless it is designed for use with water or oil. High-quality microscopes, which can be quite expensive, often require coverslips because their lenses are calibrated with the refractive index of the coverslip in mind. Even for temporary slides, such as blood films, coverslips are used to prevent evaporation and keep the specimen from drying out under the microscope's heat. Thus, coverslips serve multiple functions beyond permanent mounting, including specimen protection and maintaining optimal viewing conditions.
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What is the purpose of a cover slip? Why do we sometimes put one on a slide even though we are not going to keep that slide froever and will inevitably just throw it away? Why (eg - with temporary blood films) do when use oil instead? Why do we sometimes use coverslips instead of oil?
 
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The coverslip protects both your specimen and the objective of the microscope from damage. Moisture will ruin the seal around the edge of the lens unless a lens is specially made to focus through water or oil. With a decent microscope, those lenses are incredibly expensive (keep in mind that even those "cheap" microscopes used in teaching labs cost about $5000 apiece, and a good quality microscope used for research or pathology will cost more than a luxury car). Many of the lenses are made with the refractive index of a coverslip factored into where their focal point is, so even if you just want to wet mount something, you still need a coverslip on it. It also keeps the specimen from drying out by preventing evaporation when exposed to the heat of the lamp on the scope.

So, there are lots of reasons for using coverslips other than permanently mounting something to last a long time.
 
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