diffusion
No, osmosis does not require ATP because it is a passive process in which water molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration through a selectively permeable membrane. ATP is not needed to facilitate this movement.
floating
Osmosis is a special form of diffusion in that it brings water into a cell, rather than nutrients & other substances.
The process of water passing through a selectively permeable membrane is called osmosis. Water will move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration in order to equalize the solute concentrations on both sides of the membrane.
The movement of water molecules from its region of higher concentration to lower concentration of its region is called osmosis. Transpiration is the loss of water in the form of water vapour from the aerial parts of a plant.
Nope! Osmosis is simply the movement of H2O over a membrane from high concentration to low concentration. It's a form of passive diffusion!
One method of movement across the membrane is by diffusion, which is related to osmosis.
They are both a form of passive transport. By the way it is spelt "common"
Absorption of water by plants is a form of diffusion called osmosis.
No, osmosis does not require ATP because it is a passive process in which water molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration through a selectively permeable membrane. ATP is not needed to facilitate this movement.
floating
it is called endo-osmosis
osmosis
No. Osmosis is a form of passive transport.
Certainly; molecules move faster at a higher temperature (that is what temperature is, at a molecular level) and therefore undergo osmosis faster as well, since that is a form of molecular motion.
Osmosis is a special form of diffusion in that it brings water into a cell, rather than nutrients & other substances.
Osmosis is a special form of diffusion that applies only to water molecules. It involves the movement of water from an area of low solute concentration to an area of high solute concentration through a semi-permeable membrane.