Under a microscope, Candida appears as oval to round yeast cells, typically 4-12 micrometers in diameter. They may be seen as single cells or in clusters, and often display budding, where small daughter cells emerge from the parent cell. In some cases, especially in invasive infections, you may also observe elongated filamentous forms known as pseudohyphae. The cells can be stained with specific dyes, which help highlight their structure and morphology.
Does what look like what under a micrscope. Everything under a microscope is upside down and backwards. So it would look like a backwards if.
cotton looks like a fluffy cloud with bits of black seeds on when it is under the microscope
It is upside down.
Sperm should look similar to a tadpole under a microscope.
nothing it looks like a normal hair
nothing it looks like a normal hair
You cannot see DNA under a regular microscope. But there are very special microscopes that forensic scientists use.
Examining something under a microscope is called microscopy.
an object
The object that you look at under a microscope is called a specimen. It is placed on a glass slide and then magnified and viewed through the microscope lens.
ribosomes attached on the sides of the RER makes it look rough under the microscope .
Like the letter p