Purple
If you discovered an organism under a microscope, you would expect to see its cellular structure, such as cell walls, membranes, organelles like nucleus or mitochondria, and potentially any specialized features like cilia or flagella. Additionally, you may observe its size, shape, and possible movement or behavior.
Mushroom cells are larger than most plant cells. So if you had a powerful enough microscope, you could see the cells quite well. The same is true for onion cells. In fact, onion cells are larger than mushroom cells. For most cells, you would need an extremely powerful microscope used in science laboratories. For these, you don't need a magnification level as high.
Typically, you can expect to urinate within 30 minutes to an hour after drinking water.
A student would expect to find two seed leaves (cotyledons), branching veins in the leaves, flower parts in multiples of four or five, and a taproot system when examining a dicot.
Which main tissue would you expect to primarily make up a potato
Cytoplasm (a collection of proteins dissolved in water).
Organisms vary in size from the microscope.
Organisms vary in size from the microscope.
If you look at a thick opaque object through a compound microscope, you would likely see little to no details as the object is blocking the passage of light. Additionally, the object may appear dark or shadowed since light cannot pass through it to form an image on the microscope's lens.
chloroplast
Spores!
a cell membrane
a blob
A bacterium near the end of binary fission would typically appear elongated and constricted at the midpoint, where the cell membrane is pinching inward to divide the cell into two daughter cells. The genetic material, or DNA, would be replicated and positioned toward opposite ends of the cell. Additionally, the cell might show a slight bulge at the division site, indicating the beginning of separation. Overall, it would visually represent a transitional stage between one bacterium and two separate entities.
Depends on the microscope, I would expect. All of the light microscopes I've ever used you could just turn to different objectives, but be careful not to crack the slide in doing so.
The price changes according to the type of microscope ; compound, electron, etc. It depends on how powerful it is. Believe it or not, an electron microscope can cost up to $150,00.00. However, you can get a compound microscope [ 10x , 30x , 50x ] for about $140.00.
You should expect it to be, yes.