It will leave the cell, causing the cell to shrink.
If cells are placed in a hypotonic solution the cells gain water. The hypotonic solution has lower solute concentration then the cell's cytoplasm so the water will enter via osmosis.
osmosis high salt in egg causes water to enter eggs permeable membrane via osmosis to point of bursting egg.
Through a lysogenic or lytic infection
More than one sperm will not enter the egg.
Magma has to enter the magma chamber beneath Arenal.
You will have to choose from the following information: Water will go to where the concentration of salt is higher.
If cells are placed in a hypotonic solution the cells gain water. The hypotonic solution has lower solute concentration then the cell's cytoplasm so the water will enter via osmosis.
osmosis high salt in egg causes water to enter eggs permeable membrane via osmosis to point of bursting egg.
Enter the Matrix happened in 2003.
Through the mouth of rivers that reach the ocean and precipitation (rain and snow).
Through a lysogenic or lytic infection
No, they are not found in Michigan.They do enter freshwater at times, but they can't make it up that far.
the enter the oviduct
This is all due to osmosis. If a saltwater fish is placed in freshwater, its polar molecules, in this case salt, attracts the other water molecules around the fish, which has no polar molecules, for it is fresh water. The water molecules enter the body so they can hang out with the salt molecules, and enter the fishes cells through the cell membrane, which is semipermeable, which means that only certain molecules, such as water, can pass through it. When the water enters the cells, which are already filled with water, they become hypertonic, and burst, causing the fish to die.
it becomes a part of the bacterial DNA and it can be replicated into the daughter cells. this cycle doesn't harm the bacterial cell but it can change into the lysis cycle and kill the host cell
Gilgal (for the first 14 years).
Water would enter the cell via osmosis and it would finally burst.