No, powerful water cannot rupture the hymen. Or at least not unless you were looking at a firehose strength stream of water being fired directly at someone's vaginal opening, and in that case there would be far bigger problems to worry about than a hymen tearing!
Too much internal pressure, caused by water, will come from a hypotonic solution. When there is more concentration of water outside of a cell, it will compensate by taking in as much as possible to reach its equilibrium. If the pressure is too great, the cell will rupture.
The child was afraid if he squeezed the water balloon, it might rupture in his hand.
Any sort of vigorous exercise can potentially cause a tear. Jumping into water introduces the potential for hydraulic trauma as would a bad fall from water skiing. Yes, it is possible but not terribly likely...and not a good cover story.
Too much pressure in the line caused a pipe to rupture, and oil began pouring out.
Your cells become to saturated and they can only handle so much water before they rupture. Plus you'd have to chug two gallons for that to happen.
because boiling water would cause the cells of the seed or plant to rupture, effectively killing the plant - this would be the same for all plants and seeds, not just beans
Water is generally considered the most powerful cause of erosion, particularly from moving water such as rivers, streams, and ocean waves. Water erosion can wear away material and transport significant amounts of sediment over time, reshaping landscapes and forming various landforms.
A hypertonic solution, where the concentration of solutes outside the cell is higher than inside, can cause cells to rupture due to water leaving the cell to try to balance the concentration gradient. This results in the cell shrinking and the plasma membrane pulling away from the cell wall or membrane.
No. It is not. Nothing will occur in the first instance and water will enter all the cells causing them to rupture in the second. The first will cause no damage and the second can be fatal.
A bursa is the sac that acts as a shock absorber between tendon and bone. A rupture of the sac can cause damage as well as severe pain.
Water is a powerful cause of weathering because it can seep into cracks in rocks, freeze, and expand, causing the rocks to break apart. Water can also chemically react with minerals in rocks, leading to their breakdown and erosion. Additionally, water can transport sediment and other weathered material, contributing to the reshaping of landscapes.
No, immersion of the hand in distilled water will not cause cells to lyse. Distilled water does not contain any ions or solutes that would create an osmotic gradient across the cell membrane. Therefore, there is no osmotic pressure to cause the cells to rupture.