Robert Brown had discovered that particles can move randomly.
An example of brownian motion is tea diffusing in water the particles swirl in random directions
brownian motion[named after then botanist Robert Brown]or pedesis[from greek:leaping]is the presunably random drifting of particles suspend in fluid[a liquid or a gas]or the mathematical model used to describe such random movement,which is often called a Particles Theory
water changing to a solid: freezing movement of particles: vibration in fixed positions. arrangement: fixed positions (bonds between every particle). moving closer together water as a liquid: movement of particles: move about (slide past each other) arrangement: close together with no regular arrangement water to gas: boiling movement of particles: free/random movement at high speeds. arrangement: particles move further apart with no bonds between particles.
Brownian motion refers to the random movement of molecules found in fluids. It occurs in the cytoplasm, since the cytoplasm is a fluid.
The movement of particles in a hard stick of butter are solid. Their not moving. While the movement of particles in a melted sick of butter are liquid. They are moving.
Brownian motion is the random moving and mixing of particles.
The movement is random, but there is a net movement from regions where there are lots of particles to ones where there are fewer particles.
Movement is completely random during diffusion.
Brownian motion is the random moving and mixing of particles.
Osmosis is the random movement of particles across (through) a partially permeable membrane along a concentration gradient from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. Diffusion is the random movement of particles in a solution from an area of high concentration to low concentration. Eventually the particles will be uniformly and randomly distributed.
The random movement of particles which happens all the time ensures that they move into any space between other particles. This is called diffusion.
Temperature is the average energy of random motion of particles of matter :). Hope that helps
Diffusion is the net movement of molecules from an area where they are at a higher concentration to areas where they are at a lower concentration. This is due to the random movement of the molecules.
Yes, Brownian movement is peculiar to living tissue. It is the random movement of microscopic particles caused by the direct impact with the molecules of surrounding also called molecular movement.
An example of brownian motion is tea diffusing in water the particles swirl in random directions
Yes, it was first observed by Robert Brown in 1827, and it is random movement of particles suspended in a fluid or gas.
brownian motion[named after then botanist Robert Brown]or pedesis[from greek:leaping]is the presunably random drifting of particles suspend in fluid[a liquid or a gas]or the mathematical model used to describe such random movement,which is often called a Particles Theory