Of course a virus is bigger. Viruses contain DNA which is a polymer made up of many molecules.
A protist is much bigger.
No, a virus is much smaller than bacteria.
bacteria size ranges in micrometer i.e. 10-6m virus size ranges in nanometer i.e. 10-9m
your anti virus scans for virus
Bacteria and viruses can breed. i.e. When bacteria breeds, they form large colonies visible to the naked eye When viruses breed, they become more deadly or mutate but are still virtually invisible to the naked eye.
Virus
virus
Viruses are typically composed of RNA surrounded by a capsid (protein shell). This would mean by definition that the virus molecule, which is technically considered nonliving, is larger than a protein strand (because the capsid is made of protein).
An insulin molecule is much bigger than a glucose molecule.
Either DNA, or RNA, depending on the virus.
the virus is the smallest, a bacteria is usally bigger than a virus and a fungi is usally bigger than a bacteria
No. A cell consists of many, many molecules - millions probably.
A protist is much bigger.
A virus is a relatively long molecule, not a cell.
NO... it makes it worse....It gets the virus bigger
mitochondria
The proteins molecules are bigger.