History of Microscopes

  • Sep 21, 1500

    14th Century - 1st Scientific Microscope ever made by Z. Janssen

    14th Century - 1st Scientific Microscope ever made by Z. Janssen
    The art of grinding lenses is developed in Italy and spectacles are made to improve eyesight.
  • 2nd Scientific Microscope

    2nd Scientific Microscope
    Dutch lens grinders Hans and Zacharias Janssen make the first microscope by placing two lenses in a tube.
  • 3rd Scientific Microscope

    3rd Scientific Microscope
    Robert Hooke studies various object with his microscope and publishes his results in Micrographia. Among his work were a description of cork and its ability to float in water.
  • 4th Scientific Microscope

    4th Scientific Microscope
    Anton van Leeuwenhoek uses a simple microscope with only one lens to look at blood, insects and many other objects. He was first to describe cells and bacteria, seen through his very small microscopes with, for his time, extremely good lenses.
  • 18th century - 5th Scientific Microscope

    Several technical innovations make microscopes better and easier to handle, which leads to microscopy becoming more and more popular among scientists. An important discovery is that lenses combining two types of glass could reduce the chromatic effect, with its disturbing halos resulting from differences in refraction of light.
  • 6th Scientific Microscope

    Joseph Jackson Lister reduces the problem with spherical aberration by showing that several weak lenses used together at certain distances gave good magnification without blurring the image.
  • 7th Scientific Microscope

    7th Scientific Microscope
    Ernst Abbe formulates a mathematical theory correlating resolution to the wavelength of light. Abbes formula make calculations of maximum resolution in microscopes possible.
  • 8th Scientific Microscope

    8th Scientific Microscope
    Richard Zsigmondy develops the ultramicroscope and is able to study objects below the wavelength of light.
  • 9th Scientific Microscope

    9th Scientific Microscope
    Frits Zernike invents the phase-contrast microscope that allows the study of colorless and transparent biological materials.
  • The 10th Scientific Microscope

    The 10th Scientific Microscope
    Ernst Ruska develops the electron microscope. The ability to use electrons in microscopy greatly improves the resolution and greatly expands the borders of exploration.
  • The 11th Scientific Microscope

    The 11th Scientific Microscope
    Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer invent the scanning tunneling microscope that gives three-dimensional images of objects down to the atomic level.