by studying the cell's DNA
The organism you are referring to is a prokaryotic cell. Prokaryotic cells lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. They are typically found in bacteria and archaea.
photosynthesis
A sex cell is haploid, having one set of chromosomes, which is half of the number of chromosomes as in a body cell.
The process of cell division that allows an organism to grow is called mitosis. During mitosis, a parent cell divides into two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This process is essential for growth, development, and repair in multicellular organisms.
You can get a microscope and get a pice of your organism and see the size of the cells and compare it to the size of another organism, say a plant cell.
Kind of like Gurveer
plants
That depends on the specific kind of organism the cell comes from.
No, we are a unique single-celled organism. We have our own special kind of cell: a humanoid cell. This is what separates us from the monkeys.
Mitosis.
The organism you are referring to is a prokaryotic cell. Prokaryotic cells lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. They are typically found in bacteria and archaea.
photosynthesis
A sex cell is haploid, having one set of chromosomes, which is half of the number of chromosomes as in a body cell.
Paramecia.
what kind of wedge keeps a door where it belongs
The process of cell division that allows an organism to grow is called mitosis. During mitosis, a parent cell divides into two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This process is essential for growth, development, and repair in multicellular organisms.
You can get a microscope and get a pice of your organism and see the size of the cells and compare it to the size of another organism, say a plant cell.