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- 1. a) Bulk movement is the overall movement of a fluid. The molecules all
- move in the same direction. Diffusion however is the random movement of
- molecules which usually results in a fairly even distribution. In other
- words the movement is not guaranteed to move in one direction but the
- probability that it will move in the lower gradient is greater. Osmosis is
- similar to diffusion but is differentiated by the membrane's behavior. The
- cell membrane does allow water to move from higher to lower concentrations
- but does not allow solutes do that. b) Water potential is the capacity of
- water to move to a from a region where there is high water potential to low
- water potential. This action happens without the affect of outside forces.
- When outside actions due occur and they give water a high potential energy
- than the water will move to the region where less potential energy is.
- Hydrostatic pressure is the pressure required to stop water the movement of
- water. This is a method of measurement. The osmotic potential is the
- measure of tendency of water to move through a membrane which contains a
- solution. This occurs when a cell does not allow a hypertonic solution to
- leave the cell membrane. The cell begins to increase with water but the
- cell membrane can not release the solution and thus the water potential
- within the cell increases. This causes the water to no longer enter the
- cell. c) Hypotonic is less solute to a certain amount of water. Hypertonic
- is more solute to a certain amount of water. Isotonic is the equal amount
- of solutes in two different solutions. d) Endocytosis is the inward bulge
- causes by incoming molecules. Exocytosis is the expelling of a material
- outside a cell. e) Phagocytosis is the process where the cell obtains
- solid matter. This is different from the pinocytosis where the cell
- obtains liquid matter. These both are endocytic processes.
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis is the process where there are interactions
- between a material and receptor sites on the cell. In this process the
- cell accepts the material if it matches with the receptor sites. f) Coated
- pits are areas which peripheral proteins indent the membrane. This is
- where the vesicles for certain materials are formed. The vesicle which is
- formed is called the coated vesicle. g) Plasmodesmata are the links
- which hold two adjacent cells together. Gap junctions are the channels
- which allow materials to flow between cells.
- 2. The concentration gradient is the difference in the density of a
- material from one region to another region. The concentration gradient
- affects diffusion by allowing the substance to flow from high concentration
- to low concentration. The concentration gradient affects osmosis by the
- same manner it does in diffusion. The cell does not allow the solution to
- exit the cell when water is entering. This keeps the solution in the cell
- making the concentration high and thus no further penetration of water.
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- 4. Diffusion is more rapid in gases because they are less dense than
- liquids. They repel each other more resulting in faster diffusion.
- Diffusion is greater at higher temperatures because of the greater kinetic
- energy among the molecules. They push each other more making them less
- dense.
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- 5. The concentration of the solute is 1%. This happens because a 1% sugar
- solution is isotonic with that of the 1% sugar solution in the tubes. The
- 2% sugar solution was increased because the substance was hypertonic. The
- membrane did not allow the hypertonic solution to exit because the pressure
- from the hypotonic solution was forcing water in. This later reached an
- equilibrium when the hypertonic solution was gaining water potential and
- the water stopped rising. The vice versa happened in the distilled water
- solution.
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