Eubacteria is a domain that is primarily comprised of microorganisms called bacteria. Their average size is around 1 to 3 micrometers.
yes... eubacteria are microscopic and range in size from 1 to 5 micrometers.
Eubacteria is in fact prokaryotic.
No
no loser
Atoms and molecules are submicroscopic and it is their behavior that determines the macro behavior of chemicals in bulk.
Chemists are interested in the submicroscopic description of matter because a submicroscopic description of matter is part of the theories of chemistry and provides explanations for macroscopic phenomena and chemical reactivity. These theories provide a means for us to apply chemistry, using it to predict other macroscopic phenomena.
Yes, they are known as bacteriophages, or simply phages.For example, Enterobacteria phage T4 is a phage which infects the E-Coli bacterium.Your question should be "Can a virus infect a bacterium?" Yes they can. Viruses are 10 to 100 times smaller than bacteria or in other words, they are submicroscopic parasites. They are the smallest living things known to man.
No. The fragments in mudtsone are microscopic if not submicroscopic.
Fungi are biggest as they have much longer cell structures than both bacteria and viruses. Bacteria are 2nd largest and viruses smallest.
Submicroscopic is anything you can't see by naked eye but can be observed with a microscope, like virus, bacteria, cyanobacteria, algae, etc.
A bacteria is a unicellular microorganism while a virus is a submicroscopic particle.
submicroscopic
Microscopic is larger. The sub- prefix in submicroscopic meaning under/below.
Atoms and molecules are submicroscopic and it is their behavior that determines the macro behavior of chemicals in bulk.
Chemists are interested in the submicroscopic description of matter because a submicroscopic description of matter is part of the theories of chemistry and provides explanations for macroscopic phenomena and chemical reactivity. These theories provide a means for us to apply chemistry, using it to predict other macroscopic phenomena.
Electron Microscope.
Yes, they are known as bacteriophages, or simply phages.For example, Enterobacteria phage T4 is a phage which infects the E-Coli bacterium.Your question should be "Can a virus infect a bacterium?" Yes they can. Viruses are 10 to 100 times smaller than bacteria or in other words, they are submicroscopic parasites. They are the smallest living things known to man.
No. The fragments in mudtsone are microscopic if not submicroscopic.
Actually, the flu is the disease (influenza) and the microbes are what cause the disease, not the other way around. The pathogens ("microbes") responsible for the infectious disease called influenza are viruses.Viruses are submicroscopic-sized particles that can attach to the cells of a host person, animal, plant or bacteria (they are very small even compared to bacteria and other pathogens that are called microbes*) and replicate within the cells. This eventually destroys the cells and makes us sick until our bodies can use the immune system's processes to get rid of it.* Not all scientists classify viruses as microbes since they are submicroscopic and are non-living organisms.
An organism of microscopic or submicroscopic size, especially a bacterium or protozoan.
the chemists goal is to understand the atoms that compose it