Yes. It may be hard at first to see, but after focusing the lens they should be visible.
Yes, a paramecium can be seen under a microscope. It is a single-celled organism that typically measures about 50 to 300 micrometers in length, making it visible at high magnification. Paramecia have a distinctive slipper-like shape and are covered in tiny hair-like structures called cilia, which help them move through water. While not visible to the naked eye, they are easily observed with the right optical tools.
The singular possessive of "paramecium" is "paramecium's." This form indicates that something belongs to one paramecium. For example, you might say, "The paramecium's movement was observed under the microscope."
Paramecium is typically colorless or translucent because it lacks pigmentation. Its color can appear slightly gray or greenish due to the food vacuoles containing algae or other microorganisms that it consumes.
The paramecium has a stiffer cell membrane than the amoeba.
The cilia in paramecium beat in coordinated pattern. The base of each cilium is called kinetosome or basal body. All these basal bodies are connected to each other and form infra-ciliary system. This infra-ciliary system is under the control of neuromotor system.
yes
What hpo
The organelles in a cheek cell that are not visible under a light microscope are the ribosomes. These organelles are responsible for protein synthesis.
A single atom is not visible in a microscope (it is too small to be imaged by photons). What you see in an optical microscope (or in general) is the light reflected, scattered, or emitted by the electron layers of the material under observation.
To measure the length and width of a paramecium in microns using a 40x magnification microscope, you can use a calibrated eyepiece graticule or stage micrometer to determine the field of view in microns at that magnification. Then, you can measure the paramecium by counting the number of microns it spans across using the field of view as a reference. This will allow you to estimate the length and width of the paramecium in microns.
only at the time of cell division in the metaphase and in the anaphase the chromosome are visible. because at this time the chromatin get aggregate and form the thick chromosome which are visible under microscope.
A single atom is not visible in a microscope (it is too small to be imaged by photons). What you see in an optical microscope (or in general) is the light reflected, scattered, or emitted by the electron layers of the material under observation.