A cell can explode if there is a disruption in its osmotic balance, causing it to take in too much water and burst. This can happen if the cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, causing water to rush into the cell, leading to swelling and eventually bursting.
The verb for explode is "explode."
Explode, break
blow, burst, detonate, pop, demolish
Pencil lead used to explode fairly easily when I lived in Bulgaria in 1995. We used to make it explode with only a lighter. It would take about a minute to make a 2 inch piece of lead explode. When I moved to America, I was sad to find that American pencil lead does not explode.
The verb for explosion is explode. As in the action "to burst violently" or "to make an outburst".
yes they can
If the cell doesn't have a vacuole, the cell may explode.
Sadly, the cell will explode.
In a plant's case the cell would dry up or explode and die because it wouldn't be able to store water. In an animal cell's case it would explode and die.
The cell absorbs water through its semipermeable membrane in order to make the ratio of salt particles to water particles equal in the cell and outside the cell. However, the increase in water in the cell makes it explode.
The cell could lyse or explode.
The world would explode
When a cell is placed in a Hypotonic solution, the water diffuses into the cell, causing the cell to swell and possibly explode.
Because if plants cells didn't have those, if they got lots of water in, they would explode
The cell wall prevents the cell from exploding! The pressure from the water, within the plant cell is so great that without the wall, it would simply explode.
No, not safely. It will not charge it, but it may make it explode.
A cell that is to large will either starve it self to death or eventually explode.