recessive
A substance that dissolves or seems to disappear is typically referred to as a solute. When a solute, such as salt or sugar, is added to a solvent like water, it breaks down into smaller particles and becomes evenly distributed throughout the solvent. This process creates a homogeneous solution, making the solute appear to vanish from sight. However, it remains present at a molecular level, just dispersed within the solvent.
The solid separates down to the molecular level - and they mix with the water molecules. We cannot see molecules with the naked eye !
One factor that seems to disappear is the influence of luck or chance in certain situations, as people may attribute outcomes solely to skill or effort instead. This can lead to an overemphasis on personal responsibility and underestimation of external factors affecting success or failure.
When something seems to disappear into a solution, it typically indicates the process of dissolution, where a solute is mixed with a solvent. During this process, the solute's particles break apart and become evenly distributed within the solvent, making it appear as though it has vanished. This phenomenon is commonly observed with substances like salt or sugar in water, where the solid particles dissolve and become indistinguishable from the liquid. The solute is still present, but its particles are now too small to be seen individually.
An allele is one particular form of a gene. A large population of living things typically have several different allele for any particular gene. For example, one important gene in humans determines blood type compatibility. That gene comes in 3 different alleles -- A, B, and O. Most plants and animals are diploid -- they have 2 of each gene, one inherited from each parent. For example, any one human has one of six possible genotypes for that gene: AA, BB, OO, AB, AO, BO. A recessive allele seems to disappear when paired with a dominant allele. If something has a dominant and recessive allele, the dominant will overshadow the recessive, but the recessive will still be there (just not showing). For example, the O allele is recessive when paired with the A allele, which is dominant, and so humans with the AO genotype as well as the AA genotype have "type A blood". Only humans with the OO genotype show "type O blood". According to the Wikipedia "allele" article, some people once thought that all genes had only one "normal" allele, which was both common and dominant, and all other versions of that gene (all other alleles) were rare and recessive. However, most genes have many different "normal" alleles, whose frequencies vary from one population to another. With some genes, the most common allele is recessive.
dominant
Recessive
recessive
recessive
Recessive Trait
a recessive allele
absorption
During nuclear fission and fusion, matter that seems to disappear is actually converted into energy.
what is it called when something seems to disappear in a solution
In most cases, if matter seems to disappear during a chemical reaction it is because there is an invisible gas produced by the reaction that you did not see or measure.
A substance that dissolves or seems to disappear is typically referred to as a solute. When a solute, such as salt or sugar, is added to a solvent like water, it breaks down into smaller particles and becomes evenly distributed throughout the solvent. This process creates a homogeneous solution, making the solute appear to vanish from sight. However, it remains present at a molecular level, just dispersed within the solvent.
all flowers are purple