Water molecules freely diffuse across a semipermeable membrane.
Yes, both animal cells and plant cells have semipermeable membranes.
no because it has no membrane
Water moves through a semipermeable membrane from an area of high to low concentration. This is called osmosis.
Phospholipids regulate what enters and leaves the cell.
nothing A semipermeable membrane
nothing A semipermeable membrane
yes, cell membranes are semipermeable.
semipermeable
The cell wall creates a semipermeable boundary that keeps the matter of the cell together while also allowing respiration. In animalian organs, the walls not only hold in material(performing the same function) but they are muscular and help the organ work. Above the organ stage, the skin on an animal performs the same function as a cell wall, as does the bark on a tree. They hold the material inside, but are semipermeable to allow exchange of substances.
cells need semipermeable membranes because, items need to come in and out of the cell in order for it to function or it will die.
"semipermeable"
A large glucose molecule requires facilitated diffusion but an oxygen molecule does not is a semipermeable membrane.
Water molecules freely diffuse across a semipermeable membrane.
Yes, both animal cells and plant cells have semipermeable membranes.
Yes !
no because it has no membrane