If you cut both the vas deferens, there would be no sperm right?
Cutting doesn't change the chemical composition.
· Absorption of water into a towel · Crumpling a piece of paper · Pulling copper into a thin wire - a change of shape, but not a change of composition · Cutting a material such as wood · Tearing a piece of tin foil
Yes. But remember; it will always grow back!
Cutting bread is a mechanical or physical change, not a chemical change.
The process is called diamond cutting.
Vasectomy
The medical term for surgical tying and cutting of the vas deferens is vasectomy. This procedure is commonly done as a form of permanent contraception in males.
In a vasectomy the vas deferens is cut and tied off.
Removal of part of the vas deferens is called a vasectomy and prevents sperm from leaving the male body. The man then is sterile and can't no longer have children. A similar type of operation can be performed for a female by cutting the Fallopian tubes (called tying the tubes). The egg can not reach the part of the reproduction system and can not be fertilized. Neither is usually reversible.
Cutting and securing the vas deferens. It is a routine procedure that is often done in a doctor's office under local anesthetic.
The sperm duct, or vas deferens, is cut during a vasectomy, the procedure for male sterilization. After this process, a man can no longer get a woman pregnant. If you're a man who wants to have children, this is a problem. If you are a man who does NOT want any more children, this is a good thing.
In a mans scrotum, there are little tiny tubes or ducts that are connected to the testicles. These little tubes are called "vas deferens." Their job is to carry the sperm from the epididymis to the penis. When a man has an ejaculation, the sperm rides along in the seminal fluid or semen to make its exit out the tip of the penis. When he has a vasectomy, the doctor makes a tiny incision in the scrotum, reaches in and "snips" those vas deferens, thus cutting off the delivery of the sperm. Thereafter, when a man ejaculates, only semen comes out- minus the sperm. So as they say, he "shoots blanks". No semen are present, therefore egg fertilization cannot take place and therefore no pregnancy. The vasectomy is a very minor procedure, usually done in the doctors office.
Sterilization can be achieved through surgical procedures such as tubal ligation for females or vasectomy for males. These procedures involve blocking or cutting the fallopian tubes or vas deferens to prevent eggs or sperm from reaching the uterus or being ejaculated. It's important to consider these options carefully as they are typically considered permanent forms of contraception.
Cutting doesn't change the chemical composition.
It is not a chemical change because after cutting the chemical composition remain unchanged.
no,as its composition changes and it can not be brought to its original state
its tengstun whos melting point is 3500*c