[Voiceover] This slide is adipose. The current magnification of this slide is 100X total magnification. Now, what we're looking for are gonna be the individual adipocytes, or the cells, which make up the adipose tissue. Now pretty much everything you can see in your field of view is adipose right now, so if we zoom in, we can start to see the individual cells. Each one of these roundish structures is an adipocyte, which is an adipose cell. What you can notice is the nuclei are pushed off to the side. This dot down here is a nuclei, here's a nuclei, here's another one, so all the nuclei are pushed off to the edge of the cell, so pushed off to the side of the adipocyte. The reason being is all this space is filled with fat, the adipose. So it pushes all these structures off to the side, which is, in this case, the nuclei. So we have all of these basically spherical cells which contain fat or adipose with the actual nuclei off to the side. So adipose, a connective tissue. We have our cells. Now we have to have the matrix, which is the space in between the cells. Now there is a little bit of space in between these cells, here, over here, not a lot, not as much as many connective tissues, but there still is the matrix, and the fibers are found within. You can't really see them, but the fibers are found within the spaces. So we have adipose, a connective tissue.