Mitosis takes place ALL throughout Organisms.
It depends on the strength of the lense you are using and how high you set the magnification of the microscope.At 40X magnification, the microscope enlarges a 2 mm part of the onion and at 100X the microscope enlarges 0.8 mm of the cell. At both 40X and 100X you can online see a zoomed out image of the cells.At 400X, the microscope enlarges a 0.2 mm part of the cell. The individual cell is more clearly seen.At 1000X magnification, the microscope enlarges a 0.08 mm part of the onion cell. At this level of magnification the nucleus of the onion cell can be seen.This link shows different magnifications of the onion cells.
The period after mitotic division when a cell has finished dividing is called interphase. During interphase, the cell carries out its normal functions, grows, and prepares for the next round of cell division.
No, interphase is not part of mitosis. Interphase is the phase in the cell cycle where the cell grows, replicates its DNA, and prepares for cell division. Mitosis is a separate phase of the cell cycle where the cell's nucleus divides into two daughter nuclei.
Onion cells are plant cells, so they have a cell wall and more angular shape (but no chloroplasts, like some plant cells, since they are not part of the photosynthesizing part of the onion plant) Human cheek cells are animal cells, so the biggest difference is that they have no cell wall and thus a rounder shape.
The cell of an onion peel is a plant cell. The cells of the onion peel do not have chloroplasts because the onion bulb (white part) grows under ground and its cells do not carry out photosynthesis.
Given a good microscope I can identify all parts of an onion cell.
In the middle of the cell
it is part of the animal cell which play a rule during cell division?
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and so is cell division. They occur at differenttimes in the cell cycle.
cytoskeleton
Interleukin
vacoule
nucleus, cytoplasm and cell membrane, and cell wall
nucleus
./.
The central vacuole in the plant cell.
It depends on the strength of the lense you are using and how high you set the magnification of the microscope.At 40X magnification, the microscope enlarges a 2 mm part of the onion and at 100X the microscope enlarges 0.8 mm of the cell. At both 40X and 100X you can online see a zoomed out image of the cells.At 400X, the microscope enlarges a 0.2 mm part of the cell. The individual cell is more clearly seen.At 1000X magnification, the microscope enlarges a 0.08 mm part of the onion cell. At this level of magnification the nucleus of the onion cell can be seen.This link shows different magnifications of the onion cells.