If you mean DESCRIBE the Phosphate cycle,here it is.
You can start from anywhere, but I`ll start at the ocean sediments.
The ocean sediments turn into sedimentary rock, which now is full of phosphate.
Then, the geological uplift moves this rock to terrestrial land.
Now, two things can happen here.
The rock can either stay above land, or the rock can be weathered into soil.
Another two things can happen.
The phosphate soil can be absorbed by the plants and trees, or can be washed back into the ocean.
Then, the herbivores eats the plant with phosphate, causing the animal to have phosphate.
The animals deficates (feces or urine) on the ground.
If it is urine, it goes backinto the soil to start back at the soil part
If it is feces or animal tissue (if the animal dies) gets decomposed by fungi and bacteria
then it gets washed out to the ocean to start the process again
sorry for the long explanation, but i hope this is what you were looking for.
All types. That's pretty much the definition of a fertilizer. It might be a natural fertilizer such as manure or compost, a mined fertilizer such as phosphate or potash, or a manufactured fertilizer such as urea or monoammonium phosphate.
Galactokinase is classified as a transferase because it catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to galactose, converting it into galactose-1-phosphate. This process involves the transfer of a functional group (the phosphate) rather than breaking or forming covalent bonds in the substrate itself, which is characteristic of transferases. Additionally, transferases are enzymes that facilitate the transfer of specific groups between molecules, and galactokinase fits this definition by transferring a phosphate group.
ATP is adenosine triphosphate, used in a cell to transfer energy and perform work.
The compound with formula Na3PO4 is named "sodium phosphate", "trisodium phosphate", "sodium ortho-phosphate", or "trisodium ortho-phosphate".
Yes, a crystal of calcium phosphate in the cytoplasm of a cell should be classified as an inclusion. Inclusions are non-living substances found within the cytoplasm, often serving as storage for various materials, such as nutrients or minerals. Calcium phosphate crystals do not have a membrane and are not actively involved in cellular metabolism, fitting the definition of inclusions.
Sodium phosphate is a generic term for the salts of sodium hydroxide and phosphoric acid (soluble in water). They are:sodium dihydrogen phosphate, commonly termed monosodium phosphate, (NaH2PO4), is also known as "sodium phosphate, monobasic".disodium hydrogen phosphate, commonly termed disodium phosphate, (Na2HPO4) is also known as "sodium phosphate, dibasic".Trisodium phosphate, commonly shortened to just sodium phosphate, (Na3PO4), is also known as "sodium phosphate, tribasic".sodium aluminium phosphate, (Na8Al2(OH)2(PO4)4).
sodiumdihydrogenphosphate
Sodium phosphate is available in different forms with varying amounts of phosphate. A common form, monobasic sodium phosphate, contains about 1.3 milliequivalents (meq) of phosphate per milligram of sodium phosphate. In a different form, dibasic sodium phosphate, there are about 2.16 meq of phosphate per milligram of sodium phosphate.
Be3(PO4)2--------------Beryllium phosphate
The DNA backbone consists of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. The sugar-phosphate backbone is formed by the covalent bonds between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate group of the next nucleotide. This forms a repeating pattern of sugar-phosphate-sugar-phosphate along the DNA strand.
PO43- is the phosphate ion.
Calcium phosphate is composed of calcium and phosphate ions. The ratio of these ions can vary, leading to different types of calcium phosphate compounds such as hydroxyapatite and tricalcium phosphate.