Yes, but not the entire organism at once. Only parts of it.
the chloroplast
Cell wall Cell membrane Cytoplasm Nucleus Nucleolus Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus Mitochondria Vacuole Chloroplast Ribosomes Cytoskeleton Peroxisomes Plasmodesmata Vesicles
The Human cell and Onion cell have Nucleus
Using a light microscope, one can view cell walls, vacuoles, cytoplasm, chloroplasts, nucleus, and cell membranes.
cell work by a microscope to see it and the are a germs and some parts of our body
You will need to look up what you see on the transparency and compare it to a drawing of a cell. Obviously we can not see this transparency and therefore can not help.
An optical microscope can provide enough magnification to see most of the cell's parts.
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.
AnswerIodine was used to stain onion epidermal cells so you could see the cells more clearly and examine them. Naturally, the cell parts are difficult to see because they are clear.You put iodine on onion cells in order to make parts of the cell which were translucent, more visible. This is because iodine stains starch present in the onion cell.
Depending on which power you are using, you should be able to see all the major cell structures using a light microscope. This includes the nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts (plant only), etc.
Mitochondria See related link