It helps us because the cell processes were never discovered with out the electron microscope. See their movements and functions much more clearly. Better than regular because it zooms more larger.
Cells were discovered in the mid-1600s by Robert Hooke. He used an early compound microscope to look at a thin slice of cork, a plant material. Under the microscope, cork seemed to be made of thousands of tiny, empty chambers. Hooke called these chambers "cells" because he thought they looked like monastery's tiny rooms.
nothing because cells were discovered with a microscope and cant be seen with the naked eye
scientists learn about cells by using a microscope and
Robert Hooke used the first microscope to examine cork cells. Later that microscope was inprved to examine plant cells and animal cells.
they used special microscopes to look at cells and observed them
the development of the microscope enabled scientists to increase their understanding of cells as they learnt they were alive and also learnt their was things in them.
it depends on the microscope. if it's just a normal microscope, the scientist probably only able to see the shape, possibility of the nucleus, spore formation, etc.
Robert Hooke.
Yes, sometimes there will be green portions of the onion. If you look at those cells under the microscope, you will see chloroplasts.
Robert Hooke discovered cells under a microscope in 1665. He took a sliver of cork and called the small encasements he saw, cells. They were dead cells, though. The first person to see living cells, was a man named Anton van Leeuwenhoek. He took pond water and observed that under a microscope.
I believe it was Robert Hooke who observed cork cells under a microscope and noticed how the cells looked like "jail cells" and that's when he coined that term.
Blood cells. The largest compartment of blood cells are the red blood cells (also called erythrocytes), but you would also see white blood cells (including lymphocytes and phagocytes) and some platelets.
cork cells
Hooke
Leeuvenhoek
It Was van Leeuwenhoek By: Semaj Lisenby
Robert hooke
Maybe
Schwann
Robert Hooke.
It Was van Leeuwenhoek By: Semaj Lisenby
robert hooke he looked at a cork and said that it looked like a cell
Yes, sometimes there will be green portions of the onion. If you look at those cells under the microscope, you will see chloroplasts.
Hooke discovered cells when he examined cork under his homemade microscope.