the color of the magazine picture looks different because the colors of the picture aren't solid colors. They are colors with an array of black dots. It just looks solid because the dots are so tiny, you can't see them with the naked eye.
If you put it under a microscope, you will be able to see the heterogenous mixture form into different parts. Opposed to this, the homogenous mixture will look similar throughout the entire mixture - also when put under a microscope.
The color of human blood is reddish brown (dried), when sample goes through wagenaar test, it gives Brownish rhomboidal crystals when seen under microscope after test is being done
A detection beam on a microscope is a beam of high energy light. The beam allows individuals to see clearly and in more detail the substance or object under the microscope.
solution
the color of the magazine picture looks different because the colors of the picture aren't solid colors. They are colors with an array of black dots. It just looks solid because the dots are so tiny, you can't see them with the naked eye.
Usually printed colors are not solid colors but rather a series of closely grouped dots of several colors. What you are seeing could be just a dot of the color matrix instead of the whole. Read more: Why_does_ONE_color_of_a_magazine_picture_look_different_when_you_look_at_it_under_a_microscope
amoebas are clear under a microscope
You should look at anything interesting under a microscope! I once got a small toy microscope at a book fair. I looked at many things but the thing that interested me the most was the picture in a book. If you look at a color in a picture in a book you will see that it's not yellow (or any color) that your looking at! It's really millions and millions of different colors! It's sooo... AWESOME!!! :-)
It does not have a color. If you look at it under a microscope, you can't see it unless you put a stain on it.
All bacteria, including cocci, are colorless under the microscope unless you use a light filter or a stain. If you use a light filter or a stain then the color depends on which wavelength the filter is for or which type of stain you are using.
mixtures with different parts that can be plainly seen with the naked eye but speckled under a microscope are called ?
There are really small black dots that are uniformly throughout the colored picture of a magazine. These dots are invisible to the naked eye, but can be magnified and viewed by a microscope.
There are many different science magazines available for children under 12 years of age. One such popular magazine is the MUSE magazine, which is offered on the Cricket Magazine website.
they look bigger.
NO. Exactly the same unless you look at it under a 300x microscope.
You can only identify if a ruby is real through appropriate equipment or/and under a microscope. With reference to what a real ruby looks like, under a microscope, you will be able to identify imperfections, the color is a very vivid red and they are scratch proof.