To indicate which parts of your body you would like to donate if you die.
You can either carry a donor card or sign up. you should also sign up anyway because if the card gets damaged or scratched or you loose it they will still know what you wanted.
When a certain individual makes a pledge to donate all, or just a named one organ or so upon their death, they receive a donor card that details what all they have agreed to donate. This card should be on this person at all times so, upon an accident, or natural death, the medical, or rescue workers can read the card and get the donated "parts" to the appropriate involved people/ institutions as soon as possible.
A deceased donor, or simply an organ donor. They used to be referred to as a cadaver donor but that term has fallen out of favor.
Since it is a metal it is an electron donor.
No. Helium doesn't form compounds and is neither an electron donor nor an electron acceptor.
A donor cell is a cell that a donor donates for genetic research.
tin tends to lose electrons
it is a card
Contact the place through which you have donated blood. Organ donor cards may or not exist in your jurisdiction...in BC, Canada the info is attached to your driver's licence file. Bone marrow registries would contact you to be a donor if you are a part of the registry, I don't believe they issue cards.
There is exactly 52 cards in a normal stack.
compadibility with other blood types
Exactly around 10-20 depending what fleer basketball cards you are talking about
the clone will come out exactly just like the one who donated the somatic cell
Exactly half. Half of 52 is 26.
There is exactly one.
A total of 240 cards will fit exactly into that area.
not exactly there are alot of cards and so, No
the correct form is donor as in a blood or organ donor.
A deceased donor, or simply an organ donor. They used to be referred to as a cadaver donor but that term has fallen out of favor.