The reaction would produce so much energy a black hole would form swallowing the earth and its inhabitants.
osmosis in human cells
Osmosis is the term used to describe the movement of water through cells. Osmosis is important because all cells need water in order to survive.
In nearly all of the 30 trillion cells of the body
the way cells get water is from a living animals body from when it drinks or eats food or from a human body.
It causes them to shrink as they "donate" the water inside them into the circulation, a process known as osmosis.
where does osmosis occur in the human body?
sweat iz an example of osmosis in human.
what might happen if the human body did not have specialized cells tissue organs and organ systems to maintain homeostasis
_crenate
Two osmosis examples in human body can be; 1) sweat and/or dehydration 2) liquid to urine
Osmosis works in the human body by transporting the water through the kidneys, blood and stomach. It occurs where ever there is water in the body.
If you're talking about transporting materials into and out of the cells, they would be diffusion, osmosis, neither of which requires the use of energy; and active transport, which does require energy.