yay! I can finally do a hand stand!!
it has 2 parallel sides!! imagine diamonds on playing cards
If it's a linear function, 3 should do, but 4 will give an extra check on you work. If the function is quadratic exponential, etc. then at least 4 pairs should be used.
Six rectangles. Three pairs of congruent rectangles. Imagine a standard box unfolded. The two ends are the same, the sides are the same and the top and bottom are the same.
It has 2 pairs.
23 pairs.
Some bacteria come as attached pairs, but they do not provide extra function(s) for their partner. Other than that, I do not believe their are any fully-grown and functioning bi-celled organisms.
as much as he could imagine
Can't do a picture, but imagine a kite, or an arrowhead.
Yes, you can keep same sex gerbils in pairs if they are littermates and have grown up together without having been separated.
Extra base pairs inserted into a new place in the DNA
it has 2 parallel sides!! imagine diamonds on playing cards
Twelve pair is the norm, but about 5% have one or more extra ribs.
Humans normally have 12 pairs of ribs, but occasionally there are 2 extra pairs of very short ribs.
an abnormality that is associated with extra chrommosomes that appears along the pairs of chromosomes of that type is reffered to as
Compounds form their shapes due to the size of the atoms and the repelling of bonding pairs of electrons. The electron pairs repel the the furthest parts of the atom that they can(It's easier if you imagine the atom's outer shell as a sphere, where the electron pairs are as far apart as possible)
GC base pairs are more stable than AT base pairs because they have three hydrogen bonds holding them together, while AT base pairs have only two hydrogen bonds. This extra bond in GC pairs makes them stronger and more difficult to break apart.
Inserting extra base pairs in exons could cause a frameshift mutation, leading to a change in the reading frame of the mRNA. This can result in a completely different amino acid sequence being translated, potentially creating a nonfunctional or altered protein.