No. Unless you are looking under a microscope.
A germ is so tiny, it cannot be seen by the human eye, you need a microscope to see it. IT IS 1/1000 OF A MILLIMETER
Ultraviolet and infrared are colors that the human eye cannot see.
Ultraviolet and infrared are colors that the human eye can't see.
A germ is so tiny, it cannot be seen by the human eye, you need a microscope to see it. IT IS 1/1000 OF A MILLIMETER. The sun is about 1398650 miles across. So a germ is 2,250,908,985,600 times smaller than the Sun.
Far as Human Eye Could See was created in 1987.
The human eye can typically see objects as small as 0.1 millimeters, which is about the width of a human hair.
they both see
The human eye cannot see colors that are outside the visible spectrum, such as ultraviolet and infrared.
Germs are small because they have evolved to replicate quickly and efficiently, allowing them to spread and survive in various environments. They are naked to the human eye because they lack the physical structures or features that make them visible at the macroscopic level, such as pigmentation or complex cell structures.
We see out of the eye because of the light that's hits the eye and the light that we see it sends a signal to the brain and then we can see the picture.
The smallest object a human eye can see in special condition is 0.116 mm.
The human eye cannot see ultraviolet and infrared light, as well as certain colors outside the visible spectrum.