They all have something to do with 'looking through' with your eyes.
If you move a specimen under a microscope to the left, it appears to move to the right when looking through the lens because the view is inverted and reversed on the microscope slide.
The cytoplasm is somewhat clear when looking through a light microscope. However you can see where the cytoplasm is. You can see cell walls and cell membranes through a light microscope, the spaces in between these lines is cytoplasm.
If you are looking through a microscope, those lines are called the cell wall and only plant cells have cell walls.
No, you need a florescent microscope to see that.
Yes!
because it would not fit under the microscope
YOu would look at the lines between the darker lines and find out if it is intwined with each other
It is the area that you see when looking through the microscope. The field of view depends on the strength of magnification. The lower the power the larger the field of view.
When looking through a microscope, objects appear larger because the lens system magnifies them. The microscope uses light to illuminate the object, allowing us to see intricate details that are not visible to the naked eye. Magnification and resolution of the microscope determine how clearly we can observe the object.
When looking through a microscope at 40x magnification, you can see small details and structures that are not visible to the naked eye, such as individual cells, cell organelles, and microorganisms.
To illuminate what you are looking at or to give enough light to see through something you are looking at.
because you slow
Only if you are looking through a microscope.
reading and looking through a microscope
The amount of specimen visible on a microscope is referred to as the field of view. This refers to the diameter of the circular area that is visible when looking through the microscope. The field of view may vary depending on the magnification level of the microscope lens.
The area of the slide seen through a microscope depends on the magnification level of the microscope and the field of view. The area will be smaller at higher magnifications and larger at lower magnifications.