The structure that is seen is the cell wall. This keeps the shape of the cell and is only found in plant cells. The organelles that can be see in a stained onion cells all depends on your microscope. Under a x400 light microscope we could see the cell wall, cell membrane, nucleus and cytoplasm,
Yes. If viewed under even a simple light microscope, the cell structure of a cheek cell and the cell walls of an onion cell can clearly be seen.
Large cell structures such as the nucleus and mitochondria can be seen under the light microscope if they are properly stained. In addition, chromosomes and centromeres can be seen during cell division.
Potato cells have larger, more angular shape and contain starch granules, while onion cells are smaller and have a more rectangular shape with a distinct cell wall. Additionally, potato cells lack the characteristic onion cell layers seen in onion cells.
Chromosomes are structures in the nucleus of the cell which contain DNA and can best be seen when the cell is dividing.
Iodine solution is usually used for starch test. It colors the cell blue-black if the starch is present. Onion does not have starch. Hence it will not turn blue-black when iodine solution is added. However it does have its use in staining the cell.Similar questions:Does_onion_juice_contain_starch
Methylene blue is not suitable for staining onion cells because it does not effectively bind to the distinct cell structures present in onion cells, such as the cell walls and nuclei. Toluidine blue or safranin O are commonly used stains for onion cells as they provide better contrast and visibility of cell structures.
Chloroplasts
The structures that are found in the hydrilla which are not found in the onion cell are chloroplasts, specifically the stomata and chlorophyll. Onions lack these structures because they grow underground.
Iodine dyes cells a purple color. This enables things to be seen easier under a microscope.
The onion cells are much more rectangle shaped, than the cheek cells and the nucleus in the onion cell is much more bigger and better seen in the microscope.
Oh, dude, when you stain an onion cell, it's like giving it a little makeover - you can actually see the details more clearly under a microscope because the stain highlights different structures. Unstained cells are just chilling in their natural state, not trying to impress anyone with their flashy colors. So yeah, staining basically just helps you spot the cool stuff inside the cell easier.
Electron microscope
Yes. If viewed under even a simple light microscope, the cell structure of a cheek cell and the cell walls of an onion cell can clearly be seen.
As the cells are transparent, the components cannot be seen clearly through a microscope. We stain the cell so that we can see the components of the cell clearly through a microscope.
Large cell structures such as the nucleus and mitochondria can be seen under the light microscope if they are properly stained. In addition, chromosomes and centromeres can be seen during cell division.
The diagram that represents a cell organelle that can absorb iodine stain and be seen with the low power of a compound light microscope is the nucleus. The nucleus absorbs the iodine stain and becomes visible under the microscope due to its high DNA content, which binds with the stain.
Cell boundaries (distinct black lines between the cells), and the stained cytoplasm are visible at 10 (ocular magnification) by 5 (stage magnification). The cells are very small at this point. At 10 by 10 cells are bigger and the vacuoles can be seen clearly as separate parts. Any other organelles cannot be seen by a low power microscope. As far as I remember nuclei cannot be seen in the case on onion epidermis. However, i am not too sure.