If a cell gets to much water inside of it, it will burst.
If a cell is dropped into pure water, water will enter the cell by osmosis. This can cause the cell to swell and potentially burst due to the increased pressure within the cell.
A hypertonic solution, where the solute concentration is higher outside the cell than inside, will cause a cell to lose water. Water molecules will move out of the cell to try to equalize the concentrations, leading to dehydration and shrinking of the cell.
it will eventually burst
If excess water moves into an animal cell, it will eventually burst. This happens if the cell is placed in a hypotonic solution (a solution with a lower solute concentration than the cell).
When a plant cell is placed in a hypotonic solution then plant cell gains water by osmosis there is swelling of the contents of the cell away from the cell wall ,this phenomenon is known as deplasmolyzis
well, it gwets hot
It starts to flow faster!
An Animal Cell in hypertonic solution will look shriveled due to osmotic effects on the cell. the hypertonic solution means there is more water potential outside of the cell, water moves from a low water potential to a high water potential. Therefore the water diffuses out of the cell decreasing the volume bringing the cell membrane in making it look shriveled up.
Too much water inside a cell will cause it to burst.
the cell won't have water when it is needed
it shrinks
it dies
it dies
As water gains heat, it transitions from a solid (ice) to a liquid (water) and eventually to a gas (water vapor) as it reaches its boiling point. This process involves absorbing energy to break the intermolecular bonds holding the water molecules together.
it dies
You die
If a cell is dropped into pure water, water will enter the cell by osmosis. This can cause the cell to swell and potentially burst due to the increased pressure within the cell.