Well the thing is, you dont say where you are from. The person calling or texting you will be charged alot of money if it is long distance, but if you are both located in America or in the same place you should be fine. Just make sure that if the person is visiting china or something and you are in china, the person that is not from china will be charged for texting someone in china, even though they are there..... i think. :) Hope this helps! For more info you can go to your phone plan( Version, T-Mobile, AT&T, etc....)
No, the inside of a cell is typically more negatively charged compared to the outside. This difference in charge is primarily due to the distribution of ions, particularly sodium (Na⁺) and potassium (K⁺), as well as negatively charged proteins and other molecules inside the cell. The resting membrane potential of a cell usually ranges around -70 mV, indicating that the interior is negatively charged relative to the exterior.
The Hydrophobic phospholipid "tails." Cell Membranes are composed of lines of hydrophilic (water loving) phospholipid heads that face outside the cell and inside the cell. On the inside of the membrane, however, are hydrophobic (water hating) phospholipid tails, which repel charged particles.
Depolarization is followed by positively charged ions, such as potassium leaving the cell, causing the positive charge to lower.. Then other positively charged ions, such as sodium, are removed by the special transport system, such as the sodium-potassium pumps, until the electrical potential inside the cell reaches its original negative charge is called Repolarization.
The cell membrane is semi-permeable so that charged ions can not diffuse down or up a concentration cell into or out of the cell. There are cell bound proteins that transport charged ions like K+, Na+ and Ca2+ across the cell membrane and the net effect is that the cell is negatively charged ( about -70 mV) with respect to the extracellular space.
The cell membrane allows small, uncharged molecules like oxygen and carbon dioxide to pass through freely. Larger molecules and charged ions require specific protein channels or transporters in the cell membrane to enter. The cell membrane blocks large molecules, charged ions, and hydrophilic molecules from freely crossing.
Nothing it just rings
You cannot text from a cell phone that is not charged.You can text to a cell phone that is not charged; however, the recipient will not be able to receive the text until the phone is charged.
You can retrace your steps or have a friend call it. If that doesn't work, you need to contact your cell phone provider so you are not charged with anything if someone stole it. Good luck!
In an electrochemical cell, the cathode is more positively charged than the anode.
negatively charged
20 .50
Yes, anodes are positively charged in an electrochemical cell.
A cell-phone set to "silent'.
True. This difference in charge, with the inside of the cell more negatively charged compared to the outside, is known as the resting membrane potential. This is a key characteristic of the resting state of a neuron.
No, the inside of a cell is typically more negatively charged compared to the outside. This difference in charge is primarily due to the distribution of ions, particularly sodium (Na⁺) and potassium (K⁺), as well as negatively charged proteins and other molecules inside the cell. The resting membrane potential of a cell usually ranges around -70 mV, indicating that the interior is negatively charged relative to the exterior.
Yes, No. If you have Verizon it will cost a lot. But if you have AT&T it won't cost you a lot. I hope that answers the question!
No.