The cytoplasm is somewhat clear when looking through a light microscope. However you can see where the cytoplasm is. You can see cell walls and cell membranes through a light microscope, the spaces in between these lines is cytoplasm.
they are barely visible under light microscope. they are visible under good light microscope as tiny rods.
Yes! It is highly visible!
The light microscope uses visible light. Light microscopes are what are usually used in science classrooms.
With a less stronger microscope the nucleus ,cell membrane and cytoplasm are visible,but in plant cell cell wall and chlorophalast
Its a Light Microscope! (=
A scanning electron microscope will scan the surface and an electron microscope looks inside.
ultraviolet light.
The light microscope uses visible light. Light microscopes are what are usually used in science classrooms.
With a less stronger microscope the nucleus ,cell membrane and cytoplasm are visible,but in plant cell cell wall and chlorophalast
The light microscope use the visible light; the electron microscope use an electrons beam.
An electron microscope bombards its target with electrons, while a traditional microscope uses visible light. Electrons can be resolved at considerably higher magnifications that visible light (due to their smaller wavelength).
Eukaryotic flagella are visible through a light microscope. Bacterial flagella are only visible with a light microscope if they are specially stained with a mordant and a flagella stain.
bacteria.
only at the time of cell division in the metaphase and in the anaphase the chromosome are visible. because at this time the chromatin get aggregate and form the thick chromosome which are visible under microscope.
The organelles in a cheek cell that are not visible under a light microscope are the ribosomes. These organelles are responsible for protein synthesis.
Bacteria are the smallest of microorganisms that are visible under a light microscope. A light microscope can see things as small as 0.2 micrometres!
cell membrane, cytoplasm, nuclear membrane, nucleus, chromatin, cell wall, and chloroplast.
Its a Light Microscope! (=
A scanning electron microscope will scan the surface and an electron microscope looks inside.