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Cells dramatically range in size, and viruses are even
smaller. The amoeba, a single-celled eukaryote that eats
smaller unicellular organisms, is visible under a light
microscope. But to observe a virus, one would have to use
an electron microscope, which relies on a high-voltage
beam of electrons to magnify an image.
Sizing Up Life
500 μm
Amoeba proteus
130 μm
Human egg cell
(shown next to an Amoeba proteus)
30 μm
Skin cell
(shown next to a human egg cell)
8 μm
Red blood cell
(shown next to a skin cell)
.1 3 μm
Influenza virus
(shown next to a measle virus)
.0 3 μm
Rhinovirus
(shown next to an influenza virus)
3 μm
E. coli bacterium
(shown next to a red blood cell)
.2 2 μm
Measle virus
(shown next to an E. coli bacterium)