Robert Hooke.
It helps us because the cell processes were never discovered with out the electron microscope. See their movements and functions much more clearly. Better than regular because it zooms more larger.
By Hook looking in a microscope. It was a cork cell.While Hook was examining a dried cork he observed small chambers and named them cell. So it was observation of cork that led to the discovery of cell
He discovered bacteria with his self designed microscope.
When Hooke looked at the cork cells through his microscope, he noticed that they looked like individual little chambers, and another word for chambers is cells, so that's why he called them cells.
Charles Oatley in 1952 discovered the electron scanning microscope, but Max Knott created the first prototype of the SEM in 1935.
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke in the year 1665 discovered the primitive microscope .
It helps us because the cell processes were never discovered with out the electron microscope. See their movements and functions much more clearly. Better than regular because it zooms more larger.
Extreamly tiny.
it was discovered in the year 1595
Zacharias Janssen discovered the compound microscope
Robert Hooke was a 17th-century scientist who formulated Hooke's law, which states that the force needed to extend or compress a spring by a distance is proportional to that distance. This principle is widely used in physics to understand the behavior of springs and elastic materials under stress.
By Hook looking in a microscope. It was a cork cell.While Hook was examining a dried cork he observed small chambers and named them cell. So it was observation of cork that led to the discovery of cell
a microscope Either a microscope or a magnifying glass, depending on just how small the 'tiny living things' are.
Robert Hooke was the first man to look at cells through his very simple microscope. He observed dead cork cells and described them as cells in a monastary. He called the tiny empty chambers in the cork, cells.
alveoli
These tiny chambers are called alveoli. They are not exclusive to just reptiles, but are part of the circulatory system of all vertebrates.