During electrolyte regulation, water bubbles up hydrogen gas because it is a dipole.
Salt solutions are used in osmosis experiment to show that water will move to the side that has more salt. "Water follows salt."
Sweat is secreted to cool the body by transpiration (water changing to a vapor). The salt is what draws the water out of the body. The salt is actively transported and the water accompanies the salt via osmosis. The only way to prevent a loss of salt is by avoiding the need for perspiration.
The inside of a cell and the outside of the cell are usually in equilibrium as far as salt is concerned. Water always follows salt.If the outside has more salt, then water will follow it outwards. The cell will lose water and become shriveled.
The salt outside the celery is higher than it is inside. Water will leave the celery and it will (over time) become wilted. If you put the celery into plain water, the water will move into the celery causing it to become firmer. The water will always move to where there is more salt. There is a saying that "water follows salt".
water passively follows salt
During electrolyte regulation, water bubbles up hydrogen gas because it is a dipole.
water follows sodium
Salt solutions are used in osmosis experiment to show that water will move to the side that has more salt. "Water follows salt."
which one is neutral compound of follow air water sugar salt
Water always follows the salt.
Sweat is secreted to cool the body by transpiration (water changing to a vapor). The salt is what draws the water out of the body. The salt is actively transported and the water accompanies the salt via osmosis. The only way to prevent a loss of salt is by avoiding the need for perspiration.
The inside of a cell and the outside of the cell are usually in equilibrium as far as salt is concerned. Water always follows salt.If the outside has more salt, then water will follow it outwards. The cell will lose water and become shriveled.
The salt outside the celery is higher than it is inside. Water will leave the celery and it will (over time) become wilted. If you put the celery into plain water, the water will move into the celery causing it to become firmer. The water will always move to where there is more salt. There is a saying that "water follows salt".
aldosterone retains salt at the distal convoluted tubule and the water follows
I think it's because salt dissolves better in hot water than cold water, so as the solution cools the salt wants to come out of solution and crystallize. When you pour the solution over the sponge, this causes the liquid to evaporate. This further concentrates the salt so that it will crystallize. The salt crystals will start to form on undissolved salt or on the sponge. Once the crystals start forming, they grow fairly rapidly...
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it