• @Eiri
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    16 days ago

    Those are so cool. They’re the only way (I know of) that you can see molecules with your naked eye. Actual molecules! That’s practically at the level of atoms, and you can see that microscopic stuff!

    **Edit: they are not, in fact, molecules. See replies for more info. **

    Also red blood cells. It’s pretty cool that if you stare at the sky (not the sun; please not the sun) you can sometimes see red blood cells move in the back of your eye. Single cells! Amazing.

    • @[email protected]
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      2216 days ago

      Err, I don’t think that’s right. That’s physically impossible. Only electrons are small enough to visualise molecules and atoms, which is why you need electron microscope to see those.

      • @Eiri
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        16 days ago

        Whoa, my optometrist told me that’s what they are and now I’m really disappointed.

        Considering their shape and what you said about them being impossible to observe in visible light… I guess those branch-like pieces are cell organelle fragments instead?

        Dang, and here I was excited to be seeing molecules.

        • Flax
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          1016 days ago

          You can see cells with the naked eye as well. Notably, eggs. Chicken eggs are also one cell. The largest cell is an ostrich egg.

          • @[email protected]
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            516 days ago

            There are amoebas that reach 5mm in length.

            IIRC, there are limits on how big they can get based on how far RNA can travel after copying DNA.

            • Flax
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              216 days ago

              Eggs are still bigger. I think you can actually see human eggs with the naked eye, as they are the width of a hair. Would probably need to be placed on a contrasting surface, though, and appear as a tiny speck

          • @Gemini24601
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            216 days ago

            Don’t forget about Valonia ventricosa as well!

    • Echo Dot
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      1316 days ago

      They are individual cellular organisms but they’re not molecules. Individual molecular structures are too small for light to interact with so no matter how much you magnify them you’re never going to see them.

      That’s why things like electron microscopes were invented. You can’t just build bigger and more powerful microscopes it doesn’t work.

      • @Eiri
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        316 days ago

        Looks like you’re closer to the truth than I am.