For the enzyme to work, its particles must collide with the particles of the substrate. The more particles there are per unit volume, the more frequent the collisions will be. Thus changing the concentration of either chemical will have the same effect.
The Doppler effect
As far as I know, there will always be a Doppler effect when there is relative movement between the object that emits sound, and the observer (i.e. you, who are listening to the sound).
it has been interpreted to mean that when employees feel important and recognized, they exhibit greater motivation to excel in their work activities
The process you're thinking of is called "diffusion". It is the property of a substance to travel from a place of greater concentration to a place of lessen concentration. Put simply, a substance will spread itself out in whatever area it's contained in. The effect this has on the smelly gas in the room is that the gas will go from the area of greater concentration (Where the gas was released) to lesser concentration (The rest of the room). Thus, the gas will spread out evenly amongst the air in the room.
If the solution contains acid, then the alkali turns the litmus to its original colour(blue).The color is effected by the concentration of the acid and the alkali.
At low concentration of substrate , rate of enzyme action is directly proportional to conc. of substrate .
Temperature, pH, substrate concentration
Because you will still have the same number of enzymes inhibited. For example, you have 20 enzymes and 10 non-competitive inhibitors. Regardless of substrate concentration, at any one time, there will only be 10 enzymes available to accept a substrate. Increasing the substrate concentration does not affect this.
Oddly phased question in my opinion. Vmax is only effected by the amount of enzyme present in the reaction. Substrate concentration has zero effect on Vmax. There for I believe the answer in no. {Enzyme concentration is responsible for this}
It slows down or even stop the enzymatic activity because it compete the actove site of the enzymes with substrate and its effect can be reduced by concentrating the concentration of substrate or add more subatrate therefore more substrate are compete with the inibitors
the rate of coagulation increases as the concentration of calcium ions increase.
The four factors that affect enzyme activity are temperature, pH, substrate concentration, and the presence of inhibitors or activators. Temperature and pH can alter the enzyme's shape, while substrate concentration determines the rate of reaction. Inhibitors and activators can either decrease or increase enzyme activity, respectively.
You can change the concentration of the substrate (milk) by diluting or concentrating it before adding the enzyme renin. Dilution will decrease the substrate concentration, while concentration will increase it. Make sure to measure accurately for consistent results.
That depends on the order of the reaction. If the reaction is zero order with respect to a reactant, then changing the concentration will have no effect on rate. If it is first order, then doubling the concentration will double the rate. If it is second order, then doubling the concentration will quadruple the rate.
temperature,pH and substrate concentration
Increasing the concentration of an acid would increase the rate and vigor of the reaction involving a metal such as magnesium.
The use of substrate in Field Effect Transistors is for it to serve as insulating material between the gate and the source.