Nothing will happen... but when you put a drop of the vial in the phenolphthalein, the phenolphthalein will turn into pink...
It was just an observation that I saw in our experiment this afternoon
A club fungus placed in an environment with no light would be unable to photosynthesize and produce its own food. It would rely solely on nutrients obtained from the soil or other organic matter in its surroundings, potentially leading to slower growth or eventual death if the environment lacks sufficient nutrients.
If a saltwater plant were placed in a freshwater aquarium, it would likely not survive due to the differences in salinity levels. Saltwater plants are adapted to living in environments with higher salt concentrations, and placing them in freshwater would disrupt their osmotic balance and lead to dehydration and eventual death.
A multi-cellular green food producing organism would be placed in the Plantae kingdom.
A red blood cell placed in a hypertonic salt solution will lose water and shrink due to the higher concentration of salt outside the cell. This process is known as crenation, and it can ultimately lead to the cell's death if the condition is not corrected.
What will happen to a red blood cell that is placed in a solution of 90 percent water and 10 percent salt is that the salt will decrease in volume due to osmosis. Meanwhile the water will enter the red blood cell, making it swell up.
It would turn pink. Phenolphthalein is an acid-base indicator that turns pink in the presence of a base like ammonia.
Yes, sodium hydroxide would tend to decrease the color intensity of the phenolphthalein solution in an ammonia stock. Sodium hydroxide is a strong base that would react with phenolphthalein, causing it to change color from pink to colorless.
Phenolphthalein will turn pink or magenta in basic solutions and remain colorless in acidic solutions. Therefore, if added to an ammonia-based solution of window cleaner, which is basic, we would expect the solution to turn pink or magenta.
what would happen if scientists were testing to see if a substance was safe to drink and used phenolphthalein as an indicator and what would happen if the test was done using methyl orange
Phenolphthalein is a pH indicator that turns pink in basic solutions. When added to sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base, the phenolphthalein will turn pink to indicate that the solution is basic.
You would DIE! Mostly anything with ammonia is dangerous!
It would die. The ammonia would kill the fish if amounts were elevated.
Phenolphthalein in a solution containing magnesium hydroxide would remain colorless as it does not change color at a basic pH, where magnesium hydroxide is present. Phenolphthalein changes color in acidic solutions, not basic ones.
An example is the ammonia synthesis.
It would lose salt into the water.
it would burst
they would have to adapt to the cold