Yes, cells can be seen with a microscope.
Most cells are too small to see without the aid of a microscope.
No, human cells are too small to be seen with the naked eye. A microscope is needed to magnify the cells in order to see them.
Yes, a 900x microscope can see blood cells. Blood cells are typically between 6 to 8 micrometers in diameter, which is well within the resolution range of a 900x microscope.
The magnification needed to see cells clearly under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.
Cells can be seen under a microscope because they are transparent and the microscope uses lenses to magnify and focus light on the cells, making them visible to the human eye.
Because cells are so tiny you need a microscope to see them, and the microscope was invented in 1590, therefore you could not see cells before then
Because cells are way to small to see without a microscope.
Most cells are too small to see without the aid of a microscope.
Microscope.
Microscope
No, human cells are too small to be seen with the naked eye. A microscope is needed to magnify the cells in order to see them.
We need a microscope to see cells because they are too small to see without one.
Yes, a 900x microscope can see blood cells. Blood cells are typically between 6 to 8 micrometers in diameter, which is well within the resolution range of a 900x microscope.
You see cells through a basic microscope with fine and course focus knobs.
You need a microscope to see red blood cells.
Sperm cells are way too small to see with the naked eye. You need a microscope to see the individual cells. Now you can see semen as a whole without a microscope, and semen is usually cloudy white in appearance.
The magnification needed to see cells clearly under a microscope is typically around 400x to 1000x.