When cells are placed in distilled water, they are exposed to a hypotonic environment, meaning the concentration of solutes outside the cell is lower than inside. As a result, water enters the cells through osmosis, causing them to swell. If the influx of water continues, the cells may eventually burst or lyse, especially if they lack a rigid cell wall, as in animal cells. Plant cells, on the other hand, may become turgid but usually do not burst due to their cell wall, which provides structural support.
Carrots placed in distilled water will become limp or wilted as they lose water due to osmosis. The concentration of solutes inside the carrot cells is higher than that of the distilled water, causing water to move out of the cells, leading to the wilting effect.
If a cucumber is placed in distilled water, the water molecules will flow into the cell by osmosis. This happens because the distilled water solution has a lower osmotic pressure than the cucumber cell.
eat cholate
The distilled water is a hypotonic environment.
Plasmolysis describes the condition of plant cells after being placed in distilled water. In plasmolysis, water exits the cell by osmosis, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall. This results in the cell shrinking and the cytoplasm pulling away from the cell wall.
because of osmosis it would get fatter and fatter with water till it burst. aww.
If the vacuoles in Elodea leaf cells are placed in distilled water, they become hypotonic. Distilled water has a lower solute concentration compared to the vacuoles of the cells, causing water to move into the cells through osmosis, leading to swelling and eventual bursting of the cells.
1) Red blood cells placed in placed in distilled water cannot reach equilibrium so they will lyse due to osmosis.2) Water you drink is assimilated into the body through the gut...it doesn't just hit the bloodstream or any other unprotected cells.
When a prune is placed in distilled water, it will swell. This is because distilled water has a higher concentration of water molecules compared to the prune, causing water to move into the prune through osmosis, resulting in swelling as the prune absorbs water.
When placed in an hypotonic solution (distilled water) an animal cell will engore itself with the water to the point of brakage. This is because the cell itself is an isotonic (aka: has balances mineral content) and the "mineraless" water will become attracted to the stable solution inside the cell. A diagram can be found somewhere, I suggest looking up cells and hypotonic soutions in Biology.
When plant cells are not in distilled water, they may experience different effects depending on the surrounding solution's concentration. If placed in a hypertonic solution (higher solute concentration), water will exit the cells, leading to plasmolysis, where the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall. In a hypotonic solution (lower solute concentration), water will enter the cells, potentially causing them to swell and become turgid. In isotonic conditions, there would be no net movement of water, and the cells would maintain their normal shape and function.
3. water from the blood cell into its environment