well, if you are talking about sperm that a man ejaculates; then no. you cannot see sperm with the human eye. it's too small.
It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.It enables you to see a single slide and work on it.
The only way to see the individual sperm is with a microscope.
Specimen is what is on slide of microscope while image is what you see
A woman does not produce sperm. Her husband needs to see a urologist.
It refers to whatever is on a slide. That could be text or graphics or video that people see when they look at a slide.
After the intro screen, the first slide is usually the title slide for that presentation.
Hold the power button until you see the power off slide, and then turn it off. This process may take twice as long to get to the power off slide and for it to totally turn off.
No. Sperm is "invisible" and you can only see it under a microscope. If there's NO sperm at all, then you're sterile.
Cork is a dead and dried out part of a tree and when viewed under a microscope appears as empty rectangular boxes or cells. The dark shadows you can see are actually the walls of other cells below.
Infertility from scarring due to chlamydia is not reversible without surgery, but some male factor infertility due to chlamydia may be. A small study suggests that damage to sperm quality and function may be reversed after chlamydia treatment. (See related link).
It might not be sperm, it could be urine.
Nobody really knows, but it could be over 100 years.