Bacterial products;
IL-5;
C5a;
LTB4
Neutrophils; these are white blood cells that release chemicals similar to household bleach killing any nearby pathogens and themselves in the process. Neutrophils are the Kamikaze warriors of germ fighting.
Water is a polar molecule and thus when a glass tube or any other tube with polar molecules is placed in water, the water molecules will attract the sides of the tube and overcome gravity. The property of water to attract the sides of the tube is called adhesion and the reason water isn't only on the sides but in the middle too is because of cohesion. Cohesion is water's ability to attract and hydrogen bond with itself so the water molecules on the sides of the tube attract other water molecules creating a network that reaches all the way across the tube.
Certain types of cologne attract women just as a womens perfume attracts you. Not all scents will attract every women but popular ones usually work the best.
No. It is the breakdown of used neutrophils in an infected wound that forms pus. The neutrophils are a type of bacteria (or any foreign body) fighting white blood cells.
A bactenecin is any of a family of antimicrobial cyclic peptides found in the granules of bovine neutrophils.
I use lots of different glues and have never found any to attract any insects.
I.G.G.Y. is attracted by any ingredients that do not attract any of the other Moshlings.
Chinchillas don't attract any rodents it's the food you feed it.
I think if you have the honesty and boldness you can attract any person . So if i want to attract any college girl simply i have to be a good person and try to do something so that she may notice me :)
Candy is hard sugar confectionery and is water soluble and hygroscopic, which means it will attract water molecules from the air and eventually dissolve. Any buildings made of candy would therefore attract water molecules from the humid air we breathe out, from the steam from cooking and cleaning and showering, and from any natural humidity in the environment. The buildings would get sticky, then soften then dissolve into puddles. The same would apply to candy trees or paths. Candyland would be a really sticky messy place.
Particles in a liquid, such as water molecules (water being the most common liquid that we encounter here on Earth) attract each other; they are loosely bonded together, in a way that freely shifts around to different arrangements, but which still keeps the molecules close together. With a stronger bond the water freezes to become a solid. In a gas, there is no bond, all the molecules of water vapor move freely without any attachment to any other molecules, because they are too far apart and moving too rapidly for any bond to form.
Well, liquids do not because they have strong intermolecular attractions. The question for liquids becomes do the molecules attract molecules of the same compound more strongly than they attract molecules of a different compound. If yes the two liquids will not dissolve each other. Now gases do not have this problem. Ideal gas assumptions involve NO attractions for other molecules. If there are no attractions then they can mix with any gas molecules.