The straw coloured liquid that makes up a lot of blood is called Plasma.
Plasma is not blood type specific, so it can be given immediately in event of blood loss when the casualties blood group is not known.
The body can regenerate a pint of plasma in about a day, so it is possible to donate this more often than a donation of normal blood, as the red cells take longer to regenerate.
It is called "plasma".
The parts of the blood are the formed elements (solid parts) and the plasma (the liquid in which the solid parts are suspended). The formed elements include red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
Blood Cells
Bones Vessels and others
Your question is unclear - the liquid which carries red and white blood cells and platelets is blood. These cells are the solid component of blood, which separates from the liquid part (plasma) when centrifuged.
Your question is unclear - the liquid which carries red and white blood cells and platelets is blood. These cells are the solid component of blood, which separates from the liquid part (plasma) when centrifuged.
Blood is quite heterogeneous; there is the actual liquid part (plasma) and then various solid or semi-solid parts suspended it in (the blood cells, for example).
The solid part of blood that is made of living cells is referred to as formed elements. The liquid part of blood is called plasma.
Not a "separation", but the blood does clot ... so that both a solid and a liquid phase are there, but they're different from the living solid and liquid parts.
Yes. Plasma is one of the four fundamental states of matter. The four states are, plasma, solid, liquid, and gas. Plasma is a state of matter where particles are in a charged state either positive or negative. However, since your question is in the category "Blood," I think you are asking if the plasma in the sun is the same as the plasma in your blood. Answer: No, there is no blood plasma in the sun; and no, there is no matter in the plasma state in your blood. Blood plasma is a straw-colored/pale-yellow fluid component of blood that carries all of the "solid" components of blood (red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, nutrients, etc.)
The solid portion of the blood is mainly made up of red blood cells. There are white blood cells and platelets too.
Yes, it's a copper-colored solid
Yes, it's a copper-colored solid