The final layer of the skin. It is made out of fat and connective tissues.
What is Hypodermis?
A waste product exhaled out of your nose.
What is Carbon dioxide?
The process of something taking place or substituting another thing.
What is displacement?
Holds the organelles.
What is cytoplasm?
These type of lenses use oil.
What is 100x or higher?
The outer layer of our skin. It is waterproof and it is the part of the skin that we can see .
What is Epidermis?
What are the lungs?
The amount of space an object occupies.
Boss of the cell and contains all the DNA.
What is Nucleus?
This is the number of objective lenses.
What is 4?
The second layer of the skin. It contains connective tissues, hair follicles, nerve endings, and sweat glands
What is Dermis?
All living organisms require this to carry out day to day activities and we consume food to obtain it.
What is energy?
The density of water.
What is 1g/cm^3?
The site of photosynthesis and is only in the plant cell.
What is chloroplast?
Cleaning material used to clean lenses or other sensitive laboratory.
What are lens paper?
It is your body outer layer. It’s made up of skin, hair, nails, glands, and the nerves on your skin. The older skin cells go through your skin and turn into your hair and nails.
What is the Integumentary System?
Connects nose to lungs and is lined by mucous.
What is Trachea?
A dimensionless quantity representing the amount of matter in a particle or object
What is mass?
Large storage vesicle that is used for storing things.
What is Vacuole?
Moves the objective lenses closer to or further away from the specimen in large steps.
What is the coarse focus?
The number of bacteria on your skin.
What is 100 billion?
It prevents entry of food into the wind pipe.
What is Epiglottis?
it states that if pressure is exerted on a fluid, it will be distributed evenly throughout the fluid.
What is the Pascal's law?
Helps to clean the cell and to fight invaders.
What is centrioles?
Moves the objective lenses closer to or further away from the specimen in very small steps.
What is the fine focus?