Part of the cell that functions to maintain homeostasis relative to the cell's passage of large molecules and particles to an area outside the cell.
Part of the cell that functions to maintain homeostasis relative to the cell's passage of large molecules and particles to an area outside the cell.
Part of the cell that functions to maintain homeostasis relative to the cell's passage of large molecules and particles to an area outside the cell.
Part of the cell that functions to maintain homeostasis relative to the cell's passage of large molecules and particles to an area outside the cell.
Part of the cell that functions to maintain homeostasis relative to the cell's passage of large molecules and particles to an area outside the cell.
Yes, that is correct. Homeostasis is the ability of an organism to regulate its internal environment in order to maintain a stable, constant condition despite external changes. This process helps organisms to maintain optimal functioning and survival.
Hypertonic
Homeostasis, which is the maintenance of the conditions in the cell or within the body that maintain life, despite changes that may be occurring on the outside of the body. Such as temperature. The body will maintain a internal temperature of approx. 98*6 even if it is 108 degrees or -20 below outside the body.
A hypertonic environment with regard to the cell.
Hypotonic means higher amount of h20 and hypertonic means a smaller amount of h20. If the cell was for example in saltwater and it isn't meant to live in salt water, the inside of the cell would be hypotonic and outside would be hypertonic
Homeostasis keeps your body stable even when things outside your body changes. This means without your homeostasis you will not survive!
A cell must maintain homeostasis in order to function properly. Cells use osmosis, diffusion, passive transport, and active transport in order to maintain homeostasis. If a cell cannot maintain homeostasis, it will die.
A stable internal state is maintained by homeostasis. For instance, sweating and the kidneys control our water balance.