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Yes immune system have memory cells. they flow around the blood.
Answer is Yes. Both T-Cell and B-Cell have memory
Acquired immunity (also known as adaptive immunity) This immune reaction is quite fast due to the immune memory.
Memory cells divide into plasma cells that produce the right antibody.
Memory cells
memory cells
Memory cells live longer than effector cells and are responsible for the secondary immune response
your memory cells remember how to fight off an infection, so if you get it again then your antibodies remember how to fight it off.
Memory cells, or T cells, are part of the immune system and carried in the blood stream. Due to the fact that they are carried in blood, the heart does help pump them, but it does not "have" memory cells of its own.
Lymphocytes that stay in the blood after an infection is gone
As a result of memory cells, on exposure to a second infection by the pathogen the response will be quicker and stronger.
Segmented page allocation is a type of memory management that uses base and bound registers to determine memory faults, similar to dynamic page allocation. More importantly it is different to dynamic page allocation since the entire process doesn't have to be in memory, similar to using virtual memory paging where the program is broken into pieces. Unlike virtual memory paging, the maximum virtual memory size is limited to the size of physical memory.