List
leucine-lysine-cysteine-phenyl-alanine
It is possible, and highly probable, that a segment of RNA could contain the sequence AUGUCA.
Yes. GCT ACG AAU All codons represent one amino acid except uracil will be substituted for thymine in the mRNA.
A main-sequence star is one that is along a curve where the majority of stars are located, when plotted in an H-R diagram. It is a star that gets its energy from fusing hydrogen-1 into helium-4.
Based on initial size and chemical composition a star will enter a band on the HR diagram as a mains sequence star. Stars on the main sequence are in equilibrium from thermal pressure trying to enlarge the star and gravitational pressure trying to collapse the star. Stars on the main sequence range from massive hot blue-white stars to much less massive red stars.
Yes. In general, a set is an unordered collection of unique elements while a sequence is an ordered list of elements.
They are called terms in a sequence.
A single number, such as 172516261546 does not represent a sequence.
Number sequences are sets of numbers that follow a pattern or a rule. If the rule is to add or subtract a number each time, it is called an arithmetic sequence. In mathematics, a sequence is an enumerated collection of objects in which repetitions are allowed and order matters. Like a set, it contains members (also called elements, or terms).
No, but it can represent the probability of such an outcome.
An interruption.
A sequence is a set of elements in which the order and number of elements matters. Normally, in a set, repeated elements are not allowed and their order is irrelevant. For example, a sequence can look likeS = {1,3,2,10,2,10}but a set with these same numbers would look likeS' = {1,2,3,10}A function, also called a mapping, is a way in which elements from one set are mapped into elements of another set.
It is an ordered set of elements. These elements may or may not be numbers, there may or may not be a defining rule - for example a sequence of random numbers.
a list is a collection of objects, usually with some common characteristic or purpose, recorded in sequence. the sequence may or may not have an order.
leucine-lysine-cysteine-phenyl-alanine
The mean is the sum of all elements in the sequence divided by the total number of elements. It is a statistic which represents the expected value of any term in the sequence (the average value).
A single number, such as 256196144100643616 does not represent a sequence.