methylene blue
Methylene blue
No. Nuclei are objects, nuclear fusion is a process in which those objects join to make bigger nuclei.
Yes. In nuclear fusion, experiments are trying to produce fusion of nuclei of deuterium and tritium, which are isotopes of hydrogen. The product will be nuclei of helium plus released energy.
Yes. In fact, they can even have two nuclei.
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Methylene blue
A student can use a stain such as methylene blue or Giemsa stain to make the nuclei of the organism more visible under a compound light microscope. Staining techniques help to enhance the contrast between the nuclei and the surrounding tissue, making them easier to observe and study.
Yes, nuclei are typically visible in tissue samples when viewed under a microscope. Nuclei contain DNA and are stained with dyes to make them more visible for analysis. They appear as dark, round structures within the cell.
You could add iodine solution to the wet mount preparation of epidermal cells to make the details more visible. Iodine is commonly used as a staining agent to enhance the visibility of cell structures such as nuclei and cell walls.
No. Nuclei are objects, nuclear fusion is a process in which those objects join to make bigger nuclei.
fusion, joining of small nuclei to make bigger ones.fission, breaking up of large nuclei to make smaller ones.
Scientifically speaking technically the dog itself does not have a nuclei BUT the atoms that make up the dog each have their own nuclei. I guess the answer could go both ways.
Yes. In nuclear fusion, experiments are trying to produce fusion of nuclei of deuterium and tritium, which are isotopes of hydrogen. The product will be nuclei of helium plus released energy.
No it will be there and visible before.
Fusion reactions. Hydrogen nuclei are fused to make helium nuclei.(Interesting categories...)
Yes. In fact, they can even have two nuclei.
globose and emboliform nuclei