look at it in microscope
cilia
Yes root hair cells do have organelles. They have a nucleus, vacuole, cytoplasm and cell wall.
Yes, root hair cells have cytoplasm. Cytoplasm is the gel-like substance found inside cells where various cell organelles are suspended. Root hair cells have cytoplasm to support cellular functions and metabolic processes.
They sure do buddy. They are responsible for the metabolic processes of the cell. This allows the cell to complete the process of respiration needed for the plants growth, and allow it to succeed and become the smartest cell in the plant.
No
These are cilia, which are short, hair-like organelles found on the surface of eukaryotic cells. Cilia can be involved in various functions such as movement and sensation. They are capable of beating in a coordinated manner to help with movement or directing fluid flow over the cell surface.
Motion-related organelles include cilia and flagella. Cilia are hair-like structures that move in a coordinated manner to help propel substances across cell surfaces, while flagella are longer whip-like structures that enable cell movement through fluid. Both organelles play crucial roles in cellular motility and function.
the cytoplasma is a gell like substance which holds the organelles in place...so a great analogy would be gel or hair spray which holds your hair in place.
In the eukaryotic cell it has many membrane bound organelles like mitochondria, golgi apparatus and a nucleus. It could have unicellular organelles and could also have multi cellular organelles.
cilia are short hair-like structures used for locomotion (movement)
growing hair
Cilia and flagella both have a 9+2 microtubule arrangement, which consists of a ring of nine microtubule doublets surrounding a central pair of microtubules. This structure provides support and stability for the movement of cilia and flagella.