No, viruses come in all shapes. Google T even viruses, adenoviruses, HIV and other retroviruses and see all the different shapes viruses can come in. Round capsids to space ship lander shaped capsids.
No, viruses come in various shapes and sizes. They can be spherical, rod-shaped, helical, or irregular in shape. The shape of a virus is determined by its protein coat and genetic material.
No, viruses are very different from each other. There are complex figures and simple figures, but not all viruses have the same shape.
Yes, they produce and utilize protein 'monomeric subunits' to construct their protective outer casings.
Yes
The shape of viruses varies greatly. They can be shaped like small balls (spherical viruses) like strands of spaghetti (flexous viruses) rigid rods, like bullets (baciliform viruses) and like geometric shapes (isocohedral viruses) The smallest viruses can be as small as 20nm (20/1,000,000 of a mm) to as much as 2,000 nm for some flexous plant viruses.
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Based on host specificity: viruses can be classified as either specific to a single host species or able to infect a range of hosts. According to the type of nucleic acid they contain: viruses can have DNA or RNA genomes. By their shape: viruses can be labeled as either helical, icosahedral, or complex. According to their mode of transmission: viruses can be classified as either airborne, foodborne, or bloodborne.
No, different cells can have different shapes depending on their function. Cells can be spherical, elongated, flat, or irregular in shape. The shape of a cell is often related to its specialized function in the body.
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Like all influenza viruses it has a roughly spherical shape.
THere are many Different shapes and sizes of Virus' ... See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virus
Viral meningitis has no set shape. There are a variety of viruses that can cause viral meningitis, all a different shape.
textbooks
Yes. All koalas are essentially the same shape.
Are all orbits the same shape????
Viruses have different geometrical shapes, such as helical and polyhedral shapes. A particular polyhedral shape common to many viruses is a dodecahedron shape. This is a geometric shape that has 12 sides.
the shape is a regular shape if it has all the same angles and side lengths.
The shape of viruses varies greatly. They can be shaped like small balls (spherical viruses) like strands of spaghetti (flexous viruses) rigid rods, like bullets (baciliform viruses) and like geometric shapes (isocohedral viruses) The smallest viruses can be as small as 20nm (20/1,000,000 of a mm) to as much as 2,000 nm for some flexous plant viruses.
For computer viruses, they have no physical shape, they are a string or program of codes that are made to effect files Regular viruses have a shape, but they are not needed as they dont effect what they do. Viruses just look like any bacterium, or in a spiderlike form.