no because they can't be free
An amniocyte is a foetal cell floating freely in amniotic fluid.
Yes. Ribosomes are found both freely floating and attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
Ribosomes are found freely in the cell cytoplasm and they are also found attached to a membrane system called the RER.
Yes. Ribosomes are found both freely floating and attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
Murola
Ribosomes, which are found in the rough endoplasmic reticulum or freely floating in the cytosol, depending on the type of protein to be made.
The ribosomes make proteins.Ribosomes, which are found in the rough endoplasmic reticulum or freely floating in the cytosol, depending on the type of protein to be made.
Cytoplasm is the jelly like substance that the "organelles" are floating in and the Cell Membrane or Cell Wall is what holds the Cytoplasm inside the Cell The majority of organelles do not in fact float freely, but are instead bound to the cytoskeleton which is a network of microtubules and actin filaments. These are also responsible for giving structure to cells that do not have cell walls. Motor proteins that anchor to the cytoskeleton can transport smaller organelles to other parts of the cell.
The force applied would be zero as a freely floating astronaut feels weightlessness as the gravitational force acting on him is zero.
freely floating
Yes. Ribosomes are found both freely floating and attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
DNA
An amniocyte is a foetal cell floating freely in amniotic fluid.
Ribosomes are found freely in the cell cytoplasm and they are also found attached to a membrane system called the RER.
Yes. Ribosomes are found both freely floating and attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
Yes. Ribosomes are found both freely floating and attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
DNA itself contains no organelles. It is simply a large molecule, however it codes for the production of organelles which exist either freely in the cell cyoplasm or attached to the cell nucleus.