Yes
purple-the nucleus' color has not yet been "for sure" determined. the nucleus has no specific color because different scientists see it differently through different microscopes. also the color of the nucleus depends on the textbook , book , newspaper or internet page you are looking at.
Through microscopes with strong lens.
Cells are stained then seen through microscopes.
The Nucleus is seen through the use of an Optical Microscope and The Mitochondria is seen through an Electron Microscope.
Microscopes are useful so you can see cells.
Microscopes that can see small things include light microscopes, electron microscopes, and scanning probe microscopes. Light microscopes use visible light and lenses to magnify objects, electron microscopes use beams of electrons to achieve higher magnification and resolution, and scanning probe microscopes use a physical probe to scan the surface of the sample.
Light microscopes use light zo you can see close up but they are not as powerful. Electron microscopes use of coarse electrons and thats when you see the really close up of cells.
Yes, cells can be seen through a microscope. Microscopes use lenses to magnify the image of cells, allowing scientists to observe their structure and function in detail. Different types of microscopes, such as light microscopes and electron microscopes, can provide varying levels of magnification and resolution.
There compared by frist the electron micrscope the electron microscope you can cut into a cell (any) and there huge they can zoom into about 2000X.The light microscope has a light to see [other one doesn't need] and light one can only zoom to 20X.
Microscopes help to see small objects that cannot be seen by the naked eye.
Microscopes allow us to see things that are not visible to the unaided human eye. Early microscopes allowed humans to see characteristics of blood, for instance. They also allowed people to see the structure of cells. As technology advanced, scientists developed electron microscopes, which then allowed us to see thing at an atomic level. It is actually possible for us to see electrons moving through a computer shift register! I saw a demonstration of this many years ago! I believe it was done by Hewlett Packard,Texas Instruments, or IBM.
He had improved the microscopes that can see things we could of never saw.