no a car does not have cells because it is a nonliving thing therefore there are no cells in a car.
Cells in a normal car 12v battery are composed of lead and sulfuric acid.
It doesn't.
A car that runs on fuel cells only has a similar overall efficiency to a car that runs on petrol because a car that runs on fuel cells is designed to not pollute the Earth but you need renewable energy resources to generate the electricity which is like the efficiency of the petrol pollution. That was what I put on my homework anywayz. :)
No. Strictly speaking you get a battery when you have several cells together. The typical car battery consists of 6 lead-acid cells connected in series.
The number of cells is 6. Most car batteries are 12 volt (some old ones can be 6v and some 4x4's may have 24v). Car batteries use lead/acid technology and these individual cells generate 2 volts each.
Cytotoxic cells are a type of white blood cell called cytotoxic T cells. These cells are important for the immune system's response to infection and cancer, as they can identify and kill infected or abnormal cells.
no, it will kill the cells if get in it
A car does not have a centrosome. The centrosome is a cellular organelle found in animal cells and is involved in cell division. Cars do not have cells, organelles, or undergo cell division.
A solar car relies on PV cells (photovoltaic cells) that convert sunlight directly into electricity. The electricity is stored in batteries. The batteries are then used to power electric motorsthat turn the car's wheels.- Visharad Jalan
The energy stored in a car battery, or other cells or batteries, is chemical energy.
yep in a little car that clowns drive.
In the car analogy for cells, the cytoskeleton would be the steel framework. The cytoskeleton supports the cell like the steel framework supports the car.