A compound light microscope is commonly used to see the nucleus of a cell due to its ability to magnify small structures within a cell, such as the nucleus. This type of microscope uses visible light to illuminate the sample and produce an image.
The nucleus is the most noticeable organelle in a eukaryotic cell under a microscope due to its size and distinct structure. It appears as a large, round structure typically located in the center of the cell.
You would use a light microscope to see the parts of a cell. This type of microscope uses light to magnify the structures within a cell, allowing you to visualize organelles such as the nucleus, mitochondria, and cell membrane.
An Electron Microscope is used to study the contents of a nucleus.
Using a light microscope, one can view cell walls, vacuoles, cytoplasm, chloroplasts, nucleus, and cell membranes.
In a eukaryotic cell, the nucleus contains genetic material (DNA) organized into chromosomes. The nucleus is surrounded by a nuclear envelope, which consists of a double membrane that regulates the passage of molecules in and out of the nucleus through nuclear pores. Additionally, the nucleus contains a nucleolus, where ribosomal RNA is synthesized and ribosomes are assembled.
You can see chloroplasts and a nucleus under a light microscope.
Yes, you can see it if you use a microscope. As to why, it is rather large and is surrounded by a membrane.
The nucleus is the most noticeable organelle in a eukaryotic cell under a microscope due to its size and distinct structure. It appears as a large, round structure typically located in the center of the cell.
Yes, all eukaryotes have organelles and a nucleus, but you just have to have a microscope to see them with. Most light microscopes aren't powerful enough to see organelles other than the nucleus and nucleolus, so you would need an electron microscope too see them.
If you look under a microscope and see that there is no nucleus, thats a prokaryotic cell. If it does have a nucleus, its a eukaryotic cell
Assuming there actually is a nucleus in the cell (it isn't undergoing cell division or anything), the nucleus is actually transparent and you see it with dyes that target it. You might be able to see it if it isn't transcriptionally active, when the DNA is condensed inside it.
With a less stronger microscope the nucleus ,cell membrane and cytoplasm are visible,but in plant cell cell wall and chlorophalast
The Nucleus is seen through the use of an Optical Microscope and The Mitochondria is seen through an Electron Microscope.
The density of the nucleus can be seen using the light microscope, because the light microscope enlarges or makes the nucleus bigger.
http://www.fidelitysystems.com/Unlinked_DNA.html contains a photo of DNA obtained via an electronic microscope. Note added by another user: This is NOT a photo of DNA under a compound microscope. This is DNA under a scanning electron microscope.
You would use a light microscope to see the parts of a cell. This type of microscope uses light to magnify the structures within a cell, allowing you to visualize organelles such as the nucleus, mitochondria, and cell membrane.
Those that you can see under the microscope are the cell wall, nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm.