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No. dilution is the addition of solvent to decrease the concentration of a solute.
chromosomes
Sodium, Potassium, Rubidium, Caesium, and Francium
In bacteria, translation occurs in the cell's cytoplasm, where the large and small protein production is addition of one amino acid at a time to the end of a protein.
it combines with the CO2 and creates an insoluable precipatent.
Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) causes water to be absorbed from the urine back into the body. Everything else in the urine, including electrolytes such as potassium, is concentrated.
the conentration will be increased.
No. dilution is the addition of solvent to decrease the concentration of a solute.
Yes. Surface tension of water increases with addition of potassium permanganate.
Several dendrites and one axon
The reaction between silvernitrate and potassium chloride during titration produces silver chloride which exist as solid(precipitate) and potassium nitrate an aqueous solution. Since the number/ concentration of freely moving ions in the resulting mixture is decreasing the electrical conductivity of the resulting mixture will decrease. Once the reaction is complete, the electrical conductivity will be minimum because at this stage only the freely moving ions in the potassium nitare able to conduct electric. Further addition of silver nitrate into the resulting mixture increases the concentration of freely moving ions hence increasing the electrical conductivity. The graph in V shape form
The electrical conductivity of the solution will be higher if the concentration of NaCl increase.
With the addition of certain catalysts and heat, yes. Be careful.
Since potassium cyanide (KCN) is highly poisonous, the addition of KCN to water might be caused by an intention to kill.
chromosomes
The sodium-potassium pump functions much like a revolving door. Its main job is to keep sodium ions (NA+) outside of the cell and keep potassium ions (K+) inside of the cell. With the addition of energy from an ATP molecule, the sodium potassium pump moves three sodium ions out of the cell and moves two potassium ions into the cell with each turn. The goal of this process is to return, or keep, the cell at a resting state, or resting potential.
Titrations are used to find the unknown concentration through an addition to a solution.