click below
click below
Normal Size Small Size show me how
5.1
Passive Transport
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| diffusion | the movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density |
| concentration gradient | a difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance |
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| diffusion | the movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density |
| concentration gradient | a difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance |
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| diffusion | the movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density |
| concentration gradient | a difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance |
| equilibrium | in biology, a state that exists when the concentration of a substance is the same throughout a space |
| osmosis | the diffusion of water or another solvent from a more dilute solution (of a solute) to a more concentrated solution (of the solute) through a membrane that is permeable to the solvent |
| hypotonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is lower than the solute concentration inside a cell |
| hypertonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is higher than the solute concentration inside a cell |
| isotonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is equal to the solute concentration inside a cell |
| contractile vacuole | in protists, an organelle that accumulates water and then releases it periodically to maintain osmotic pressure |
| turgor pressure | the pressure that is exerted on the inside of cell walls and is caused by the movement of water into the cell |
| plasmolysis | the contraction or shrinking of the cell membrane of a plant cell in a hypertonic solution in response to the loss of water by osmosis |
| plasmolysis | the contraction or shrinking of the cell membrane of a plant cell in a hypertonic solution in response to the loss of water by osmosis |
| cytolysis | the bursting of a cell |
| facilitated diffusion | the transport of substances through a cell membrane along a concentration gradient with the aid of carrier proteins |
| carrier protein | a protien that transports subtances across a cell membrane |
| ion channel | a complex of protein molecules in a cell membrane |
| passive transport | the movement of substanes across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell |
| diffusion | the movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density |
| concentration gradient | a difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance |
| equilibrium | in biology, a state that exists when the concentration of a substance is the same throughout a space |
| osmosis | the diffusion of water or another solvent from a more dilute solution (of a solute) to a more concentrated solution (of the solute) through a membrane that is permeable to the solvent |
| hypotonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is lower than the solute concentration inside a cell |
| hypertonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is higher than the solute concentration inside a cell |
| isotonic | describes a solution whose solute concentration is equal to the solute concentration inside a cell |
| contractile vacuole | in protists, an organelle that accumulates water and then releases it periodically to maintain osmotic pressure |
| turgor pressure | the pressure that is exerted on the inside of cell walls and is caused by the movement of water into the cell |
| plasmolysis | the contraction or shrinking of the cell membrane of a plant cell in a hypertonic solution in response to the loss of water by osmosis |
| cytolysis | the bursting of a cell |
| facilitated diffusion | the transport of substances through a cell membrane along a concentration gradient with the aid of carrier proteins |
| carrier protein | a protien that transports subtances across a cell membrane |
| ion channel | a complex of protein molecules in a cell membrane |