FIRSTLY THE VISCOSITY IS "the state of being thick, sticky, and semifluid in consistency, due to internal friction."
THE VISCOSITY INCREASES UP THE HOMOLOGOUS SERIES BECAUSE IT IS STICKY DUE TO FRICTION
- Alodia Gosiengfiao
You can change the viscosity of honey by adding water. While you will no longer have pure honey, the water will change its viscosity. The viscosity of pure honey is approximately 10,000 cP at 20°C and at 1 atmosphere. However, this will vary with the type of honey you have.
Temperature, concentration, sometimes also internal fluid velocity. Moreover density, type of liquid, surface where it flows, viscous drag.
paired homologous chromosomes
Yes.High viscosity magmas are thick whereas lower viscosity ones are thin and runny. Therefore higher the viscosity or the resistant to flow property , more violent will be the explosions. As the magma rises up the mantle the confining pressure reduces which results in the release of potential dissolved gases from the melt.More the dissolved gases more violent will be the explosion.
Homologous chromosomes are chromosomes that carry the same sets of genes, with one chromosome inherited from the mother and one from the father. They pair up during meiosis and are crucial for genetic variation and inheritance.
Heat it up a little to evaporate the volatile burning elements
Yes, homologous chromosomes are present in both mitosis and meiosis. In mitosis, homologous chromosomes do not pair up, while in meiosis, homologous chromosomes pair up during prophase I.
You can change the viscosity of honey by adding water. While you will no longer have pure honey, the water will change its viscosity. The viscosity of pure honey is approximately 10,000 cP at 20°C and at 1 atmosphere. However, this will vary with the type of honey you have.
During mitosis, homologous chromosomes do not pair up and exchange genetic material, while in meiosis, homologous chromosomes pair up and undergo genetic recombination. This results in different behavior and outcomes for homologous chromosomes in the two processes.
During mitosis, homologous chromosomes do not pair up. Instead, they separate and move to opposite ends of the cell. Homologous chromosomes only pair up during meiosis, the process of cell division that produces gametes.
Temperature, concentration, sometimes also internal fluid velocity. Moreover density, type of liquid, surface where it flows, viscous drag.
Increasing the temperature of a liquid decreases its viscosity. This is because heating the liquid causes the molecules to move more easily past each other, resulting in a decrease in the liquid's resistance to flow.
Homologous chromosomes pair up during the process of cell division in a stage called prophase I of meiosis.
During meiosis, chromosomes line up as homologous pairs during the first stage of meiosis, known as prophase I.
No, viscosity, the property that makes honey, say, flow slower than water, goes up - becomes more thick - as the temperature decreases. A high viscosity liquid like, say, cold molasses, flows very slowly. Its viscosity is high. To make cold molasses flow faster, it is warmed so that its viscosity goes down. (But the 'runniness' increases) This is a hard term . . . think of viscosity as the ability to resist flowing, or to resist cutting with a knife. BUT . . . and what is confusing is that while viscosity goes down, runniness increases, if that helps, any.
Homologous chromosomes line up in the center of the cell during metaphase I of meiosis. This alignment allows for crossover events to occur between the homologous chromosomes, promoting genetic diversity.
they are made up of similar chromosomes