Bigger animals are bigger because they have more cells not bigger cells.
You would think that this would be so, but cells can only function up to a certain size. So, no, they are not.
Generally not. A larger organisms simply has more cells
No.
The number of cells gets larger, and the organism gets bigger
The number of cells gets larger, and the organism gets bigger
The simplest test would involve comparing the size of cells in two different organisms of varying sizes under a microscope. This would involve calculating the average size of cells in each organism and comparing the results. If consistently larger cells are found in the larger organism, it would support the hypothesis that bigger organisms have bigger cells.
organ is bigger
You can get a microscope and get a pice of your organism and see the size of the cells and compare it to the size of another organism, say a plant cell.
Yes, cells are bigger than atoms. Cells are made up of many atoms and are considered the basic building blocks of living organisms, while atoms are the basic unit of matter. The size difference between cells and atoms is significant, with cells typically being thousands of times larger than individual atoms.
More than one. The way of looking at it that most cells are the same size and therefore the bigger the multi cellular organism, the more cells there are in its makeup.
Cells are much bigger.
Bigger animals are bigger because they have more cells not bigger cells. You would think that this would be so, but cells can only function up to a certain size. So, no, they are not.
They both have the basic unit of life, the cell. Bacteria and amoeba are examples. They are different because multicellular organisms are bigger because of the number of cells they have. They also have cells that are similar in size and shape that work together as tissues and tissues that form organs and organ systems.