No,it is found in every cell as it is the main part of a cell according to Cell Theory.
yes.
It is not stored in organelles, its inside cells (eg muscle cell), near Rough ER.
Glycolysis takes place in the cytoplasm (in the cytosol), and all the necessary enzymes are there.
No, an organelle is defined as a structure in a cell suspended in the cytosol.
Cytoplasm is stored in an animal or plant cell and its job is to store nutrition and important chemicals for the cell. The Cytoplasm also provides support for the cell and allows movement in a cell but does not move anything.
Fluid in the nucleus--nucleoplasm Fluid between the nucleus and the plasma membrane--cytoplasm
they are both.
It is the cytosol.
Diffused everywhere throughout the cytosol.
Cytosol => inside volume of the cell
the cytosol
Cytosol
Cytosol is the liquid "goo" inside a cell, and I can't think of any (eukaryotic or prokaryotic) that don't have cytosol. So yes, eukaryotic cells do contain cytosol.
They have plasma membrane as boundary. Cytosol comprise of cytoplasm and nucleus. Cell organelles such as ER, mitochondira, Golgi bodies are found in cytoplasm. Genetic material or DNA are in the nucleus.
There is nothing found for cytoplaam. There is cytoplasm contains cytosol in the cell membrane.
Cytosol is the mixture of water and other molecules found inside the cell.
The chloroplast is an organelle found in animal cells and photosynthetic bacteria. Cytoplasm is the contents of the plant cell, including the nucleus, but excludes the cytosol, the organelles and other liquids
It is not stored in organelles, its inside cells (eg muscle cell), near Rough ER.