it is wool
nothing it looks like a normal hair
Wool fibres are approximately circular in cross section at the macro scale, and have scales on the surface of he shaft. It is these scales that give wool its felting ability. At a slightly larger scale, some wool is quite crinkly - Merino wool is an example - and this gives the wool its soft feel, particularly in fine wools.
If you mean what does the virus that causes Smallpox looks like, see the link below:
The term "animalcules" was first used by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, a Dutch scientist, who observed them in the 17th century when examining a drop of pond water under a microscope. He used this term to describe tiny, animal-like organisms that he saw moving in the water.
Just get dog food that has lots of fiber in it, the nutrience levels are usually on the bag. Maybe you can get fiber pills as a subscription from your vet if your vet said he/she needed more fiber in his/her systom.
You can see a hair fiber well using an optical microscope, but you can hardly see a dimension 100 times smaller (about 10 microns). An electron microscope can review features as small as 10 nm, about 1/100000 th of a fiber.
cotton looks like a fluffy cloud with bits of black seeds on when it is under the microscope
Does what look like what under a micrscope. Everything under a microscope is upside down and backwards. So it would look like a backwards if.
You cannot see DNA under a regular microscope. But there are very special microscopes that forensic scientists use.
It is upside down.
nothing it looks like a normal hair
nothing it looks like a normal hair
Like the letter p
Like a misshaped box. It is grey under a microscope.
That is when the DNA is condensed, at which time it is called chromosome.
To identify a fiber in a cross section, examine its morphological features under a microscope, such as its diameter, shape, and any distinguishing characteristics like surface textures or color. Additionally, use specific staining techniques that can highlight different fiber types, as well as optical properties like birefringence. Comparing the observed features with known reference materials can also aid in accurate identification. Finally, performing chemical tests or spectroscopy can provide further confirmation of the fiber's identity.
Protons are subatomic particles that are too small to be seen under a traditional microscope. They are typically represented as small, positively charged spheres in scientific illustrations.