No, it is not possible. Amoeba need air, and sadly there is no air in space.
The amoeba (as we know it) is adapted to living in water. It seems unlikely that it could live in outer space, without either water or air. But who knows, possibly there is some kind of amoeba that has adapted to the conditions of outer space. I would consider that to be very unlikely but not impossible.
The giant amoeba is 5000 times larger than the smallest bacterium. This is calculated by dividing the size of the giant amoeba (1000 micrometers) by the size of the smallest bacterium (0.2 micrometers).
An Amoeba pic can be made to appear giant through the use of creative editing techniques such as zooming in, cropping, or manipulating the perspective. This creates the illusion that the Amoeba is much larger than its actual size.
5000 times larger 5000 times larger
The largest amoeba is more than 2,500 times larger than the smallest bacterium.
Yes. It's also possible that giant floating mass of spaghetti created the moon from one of his meatballs, intending it to be his giant meatball bride. Possible, but not probable.
Floating around skyloft is a giant floating hose thing with a bell attached to the bottom of it. hit the bell with a slingshot,arrow,or the flying beetle to have him drop the rope for you to climb up
Kelp, regardless of size are Botanica (Plant life) The Amoeba is a protozoan ( First or earliest form of animals) or are classed as Protists. Kelp are definitely plants. The Giant Amoeba is a time-tested science fiction device. The real ones are nowheres near the size of those in science-fiction accounts./The kingdom of Amoeba is Animaland for Kelp, the kingdom is Plantae
Only some protozoa are decomposers as giant Amoeba . Most protozoa are saprotrophic , some parasitic and some photosynthetic .
Um, no. The moon, Pandora is like all other moons, and is a giant chunk of rock floating around a planet, with no life whatsoever.
The Giant Amoeba seems to be the figment of a number of science fiction writers. It would be amorphous ( no definite shape or form) and might resemble some weird cloud formation. The idea has been scouted by the science fiction writers. If something like that existed, it might survive on various pollutants in the atmosphere and might be constructive ecologically. I"ll say this, the idea is wild but not out of the boundaries of biological science.
No. Neptune is one of the outter planets, which would make it a gas giant so there is no way possible.