Electron micrographs are typically in black-and-white because electron microscopes use electrons to produce images, which do not have color. The electrons interact with the specimen to create contrast, resulting in a grayscale image. Although false color can be added to highlight different structures, the base image is still in black-and-white.
The particle that always has a negative charge is the electron.
an electron always has a negative chargea positron is identical in all respects to an electron (sometimes it is called a "positive electron"), except it always has a positive charge and is antimatter (not matter)If an electron and a positron meet they will both cease to exist (annihilation) and gamma ray photons will be created.
The exact location of an electron can not be known. Electrons' locations can be merely estimated. Electron "clouds" or orbitals are general areas where an electron is likely to be found. There is always uncertainty as to where the electron actually is.
In beta decay equations, e- refers to an electron (in beta-), and e+ refers to a positron (in beta+).Not asked, but answered for completeness, ve refers to the electron neutrino that accompanies the positron, and v-e refers to the electron antineutrino that accompanies the electron.
Atoms do not always lose electrons. Electrons can be gained too. Atoms always try to have their outer most shell filled, and some atoms such as ones of potassium can easily lose an electron rather than gain an electron. So it would lose an electron to a different atom so that it would have a full outer shell and the other atom would also have a full outer shell.
blackandwhite
Dorothy Ransom has written: 'The experimental use of electron micrographs as a supplement to the Rorschach ink blot technique' -- subject(s): Rorschach Test
Thylakoids. These disk-shaped structures contain chlorophyll and are involved in the light reactions of photosynthesis. They are stacked together to form grana.
It has no actual color. What is seen in micrographs are just light and dark.
Yes, but valence electrons are always in the outer electron shell of an atom.
we dont know but he did go for the people who needed justice-by 13
Glycogen is a large, branched polysaccharide that appears as granules in cells. Under a microscope, glycogen granules can look like small, irregularly shaped particles. In electron micrographs, glycogen appears as densely packed clusters within cells.
The particle that always has a negative charge is the electron.
This question is confusing. Are you asking if you see only a relaxed muscle fiber in EMs? Yes, you would only see that, not a contracted muscle fiber. The preparation could only be of a relaxed fiber.
They always inter act at right angle.
Electrons make up a part of matter, therefore an electron is always in contact with you. The distance between you and an electron in Maine depends on how close you are to Maine.
Due to Uniform Circular Motion.