The surface area decreases. your a lier dude
The cell's ratio of surface area to volume would decrease. However, this scenario is extremely unlikely.
When the volume of a cell increases the surface area decreases. This is a problem because things in the cell take longer to move from one area of the cell to another so all of the cells processes take longer to occur.
volume increases faster than the surface area.
Surface area.
Although they do not increase at the same rate, as the surface area increases the volume increases slowly.
it callapses
it decreases
The cell's ratio of surface area to volume would decrease if its volume increases more rapidly than its surface area.
The Volume increases faster than the Surface Area
The ratio decreases.
The ratio decreases.
it increases
As a cell increases in size the volume increases much faster than the surface area. The possible answer is C.
The cell's ratio of surface area to volume would decrease. However, this scenario is extremely unlikely.
As volume increases surface area increase, but the higher the volume the less surface area in the ratio. For example. A cube 1mmx1mmx1mm has volume of 1mm3 surface area of 6mm2 which is a ration of 1:6 and a cube of 2mmx2mmx2mm has a volume of 8mm3 and surface area of 24mm2 which is a ratio of 1:3.
It decreases. As the dimensions increase by a number, the surface area increases by the same number to the power of 2, but the volume increases by the same number to the power of 3, meaning that the volume increases faster than the surface area.
Yes