The total amount of a substance that enters the tubular portion of the nephron each minute is said to be tubular load.
Tubular secretion is a part of urine formation occurring within the nephrons of the kidneys. After glomerular filtration, in which fluids from the blood pass into the glomerular capsule of the renal tubule, the filtrate is subject to tubular reabsorption and tubular secretion within the convoluted tubules and collecting ducts of the nephrons.
Exocrine glands classified as compound tubular have a branched duct system and secretory portions that consist of tubular structures. This type of gland is responsible for producing and secreting substances such as mucus, digestive enzymes, and sweat. Examples of compound tubular exocrine glands include salivary glands and gastric glands.
The two reabsorption pathways through the tubular cell barrier are transcellular and paracellular. In transcellular reabsorption, substances pass through the tubular cells from the lumen to the bloodstream. In paracellular reabsorption, substances pass between cells through tight junctions.
long bone
Peristalsis is a rhythmic contraction of a tubular organ, such as the intestines or esophagus, to propel its contents along the length of the organ. This coordinated muscular movement helps move food, liquid, or waste through the digestive or urinary system.
It is called a tubular magazine. the action
Filtration, tubular reabsorption, tubular secretion
There are several types of repeating rifles, fed by different systems. Some rifle have detachable magazines, while others may have fixed magazines. Of fixed magazine rifles, you may have either a box magazine. or a tubular magazine. In any of these instances, you would load the magazine. If the rifle was fed by a detachable magazine, you would then insert the magazine into the magazine well and ensure that it was seated. Rifles with fixed box magazines, such as bolt action rifles or the SKS, will require you to open and lock the action to the rear, then feed the rounds into the magazine through the open action. Rifles with tubular magazines may have different ways of loading the magazine. Some will have a slot on the side of the receiver which cartridges are fed into to load the magazine. Some will require the end of the tubular magazine to be removed, and for the cartridges to be fed in from the front of the magazine (below the bore), after which, the cap (which often contains the magazine spring) is replaced. Some tubular magazines are fed through an opening in the bottom of the receiver (this is most common with shotguns). Some tubular magazines are inserted through the buttstock, such as on certain versions of the Remington Nylon 66. On these rifles, you would remove the tubular magazine completely from the rifle, load the cartridges into the magazine, then insert it back into the opening in the buttstock and secure the magazine.
A term for a tubular structure is "cylinder."
Tubular World was created in 1994.
From the Tubular bells album by Mike Oldfield
The Tubular bells (or Chimes) originated in the 1880s
Tubular Bells was created on 1973-05-25.
The Best of Tubular Bells was created in 1972.
That depends on the model and the feed system. For example, a Saiga uses a detachable magazine, so you'd load the magazine, attach the magazine, cycle the action, and you'd be ready to go. Some shotguns with tubular magazines load from a port in the bottom of the receiver, and some have a cutout in the side of the receiver which you would push the shotgun shells into.
Yes. Not usually. Most FMJ ammo is pointed, and in tubular magazines the possibility of the point of a bullet setting off the primer of the bullet in front of it makes it unwise to load them into a tube magazine. Bullets for lever actions are usually round ended
System of tubular pathways inside the Cochlea