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No. An isotonic solution would not cause a cell to shrink, because the concentration of water in the solution and inside the cell is the same. A hypertonic solution would cause a cell to shrink.
Well, either you were made that way, or its a side effect of something. (For example) Steroids can cause the testicles to shrink.
When determining the melting point or the freezing point of something....that is when they are used....
You can't keep it from freezing indefinitely. But if you wrap something cold, for example in a sweater, it will stay cold longer.You can't keep it from freezing indefinitely. But if you wrap something cold, for example in a sweater, it will stay cold longer.You can't keep it from freezing indefinitely. But if you wrap something cold, for example in a sweater, it will stay cold longer.You can't keep it from freezing indefinitely. But if you wrap something cold, for example in a sweater, it will stay cold longer.
Freezing. It may seem strange, because things that 'freeze' are not necessarily cold, but the temperature at which something becomes a solid is its 'freezing point'.
Freezing something?
Freezing something?
It will shrink!
It would shrink. (>'-')>
Deposition and erosion can wear down a mountain and cause it to shrink.
whay caused a gallbladder to shrink
No. An isotonic solution would not cause a cell to shrink, because the concentration of water in the solution and inside the cell is the same. A hypertonic solution would cause a cell to shrink.
Well, either you were made that way, or its a side effect of something. (For example) Steroids can cause the testicles to shrink.
No it does not, but it might affect the volume of the object (it might shrink or expand).
No.
It will cause it to shrink.
No, trade winds and evaporation can cause a density current but not freezing.