muscular tissue
Muscular
The cell of the muscle tissue shorten to exert force. These tissues will support movement of the various muscles in the by exerting force.
See what happened when you complete the lab experiment.
Your nails come from nail bed. Nails are connected to the skin below. The trauma to the nails is borne by large surface area. This gives very strong support to nails to withstand the applied force on the nails. Nails of some animals are very strong as a result.
Substrate-level phosphorylation can best be describe as the direct transfer of phosphate from one substrate to another. Oxidative phosphorylation is different from substrate level phosphorylation is that it generates ATP by using a proton motive force.
Tendons are a type of soft tissue connecting muscle tissue to bone, similar to the ligaments that connect bone to bone. The function of tendons is to transfer force between muscle and bone. This facilitates the joint movement for everyday movements.
Generates most of the force needed to produce the action.
Generates most of the force needed to produce the action.
sintreificle force
Pressure gradient force
sintreificle force
Pressure differences
Piercing scar tissue tends to hurt a bit more because of the amount of excessive force needed to cut through the tissue. Yeah you can pierce through it but it's going to hurt.
When current is applied to the primary side, electromotive force is induced in it. It generates magneto-motive force in the core. magneto-motive force generates flux in the core. This flux links with secondary side winding and generates electromotive force in the secondary side according to secondary side turns.
Friction
The force is an agent produces or tends to produce motion in a body. and it can be produced when body has energy.
A potential difference (electromotive force) does.
Toruqe is the amount of rotational force the engine generates