The plant cell would shrink but remain its shape.
It will die.
If an injected solution is hypertonic to your blood, it means that the solution has a higher concentration of solutes compared to the blood plasma. This would lead to water moving out of your blood cells into the surrounding hypertonic solution to balance the solute concentrations, causing the blood cells to shrink or crenate. This can disrupt normal cellular functions and potentially lead to dehydration of tissues and adverse physiological effects.
It would shrivel up and die, because water would flow out of the cell.
If a hypertonic solution is injected directly into your bloodstream, it would cause water to diffuse out of your cells to try to balance the concentration of solutes between the solution and your cells. This can lead to dehydration of your cells, cell shrinkage, and potential damage or disruption of cellular function.
The water from the cytoplasm within the red blood cell will move out of the cell into the environment and the cell itself will shrivel up.
You need dayan 2 hours
it will shrink
If a cell is placed in an isotonic solution, there will be no net movement of water across the cell membrane. The concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell will be equal, so the cell will maintain its normal shape and size as there is no osmotic pressure acting on it.
It will die.
The iodine solution in the baggie would diffuse into the beaker containing the starch. The iodine molecules would interact with the starch molecules, resulting in the formation of a dark blue or black color, indicating the presence of a starch-iodine complex.
The solution will gain water from the fish, till the fish shrinks, and if the fish is not removed from the solution, the fish will die
In a hypertonic solution, the cell will lose water to the surrounding solution through osmosis, causing the cell to shrink or shrivel up. This occurs because the solute concentration outside the cell is higher than inside, resulting in a net movement of water out of the cell.
If a beaker containing glucose is permeable to glucose, then the glucose will go through the beaker.
If an injected solution is hypertonic to your blood, it means that the solution has a higher concentration of solutes compared to the blood plasma. This would lead to water moving out of your blood cells into the surrounding hypertonic solution to balance the solute concentrations, causing the blood cells to shrink or crenate. This can disrupt normal cellular functions and potentially lead to dehydration of tissues and adverse physiological effects.
The cell will lose water due to osmosis, causing it to shrink or shrivel up. The higher concentration of salt outside the cell compared to inside creates a hypertonic environment, leading to water moving out of the cell to try to balance the concentration inside and outside.
Nothing............. But if the water has any gas dissolved in it, these may form bubbles.
A hypertonic solution is one containing more solute, a hypotonic solution contains more water, and an isotonic solution contains equal amounts of solute and water. Whether a solution is hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic can determine what happens to the cell. In a hypertonic solution, solute will diffuse into the cell down the concentration gradient. In a hypotonic solution, water will move into the cell by osmosis down a water potential gradient, and in an isotonic solution nothing will happen because the concentration and water potential are the same both inside and outside the cell.