blue
Oxyhemoglobin is bright red in color, while deoxyhemoglobin is darker, more bluish-red in color. This difference is due to the presence of oxygen in oxyhemoglobin, which gives it its bright red color.
Dark red, almost burgundy. But the vein that carries the RBC filled with deoxyhemolgobin looks bluish because of the venous tissue, not deoxyhemoglobin.
Deoxyhemoglobin appears blue because it reflects more blue light due to the absence of oxygen bound to the iron in its structure. The iron in deoxyhemoglobin results in a different electronic structure that absorbs less red light and reflects more blue light, giving it a bluish color.
When you mix a primary color and a secondary color together, it is called a tertiary color. This occurs by blending two adjacent colors on the color wheel.
Mixing a primary color with a secondary color will create a tertiary color. Tertiary colors are formed by combining a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel.
Oxyhemoglobin is bright red in color, while deoxyhemoglobin is darker, more bluish-red in color. This difference is due to the presence of oxygen in oxyhemoglobin, which gives it its bright red color.
Dark red, almost burgundy. But the vein that carries the RBC filled with deoxyhemolgobin looks bluish because of the venous tissue, not deoxyhemoglobin.
Deoxyhemoglobin appears blue because it reflects more blue light due to the absence of oxygen bound to the iron in its structure. The iron in deoxyhemoglobin results in a different electronic structure that absorbs less red light and reflects more blue light, giving it a bluish color.
Deoxy no oxygen and is purple. Oxy is with oxygen and is bright red color
There are two types of blood cells in the human body. One is the red and the other is white. The white does not contain deoxyhemoglobin.
artery pulmonary
False
Reduced hemoglobin does not have the oxygen molecules that oxyhemoglobin has. :)
When hemoglobin is not combined with oxygen, it appears dark red.
Oxygen binds to the Fe(II). This causes a shift of the Fe(II) to be in plane with the porphyrin ring and it pulls the His in, which all increase the oxygen affinity.
Well, honey, de-oxygenated blood is darker red because it doesn't have any oxygen in it. Oxygen-rich blood is bright red, like a cherry on top of a sundae, while de-oxygenated blood is more like a sad, wilted rose. So, when your blood is feeling blue and lacking oxygen, it's gonna look darker because it's missing that vibrant red color.
by emitting beams of red and infrared light that are passed through a pulsating arteriolar bed. Sensors detect the amount of light absorbed by oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin