I think it's A
the cell membrane contain protein molecules
The answer is B, the luminosities and distances can both be different
In this situation, you should direct your partner to manually stabilize the women's head, while you quickly visualize her chest to search for signs of breathing. I hope that this helps you!
<span>Very very unlikely.
Since the recessive allele is on the X chromosome, in order for a woman to have this condition, both copies of her X chromosome has to have the recessive allele. One copy of the allele would have to come from her mother, and the second copy from her father. The copy from her mother is a 50/50 chance if her mother was heterozygous with one copy of the recessive allele and one copy of a normal allele and therefore didn't exhibit the dystrophy and therefore didn't know she was a carrier. But the father only has 1 copy of the allele and therefore would exhibit the dystrophy and as such would be unlikely to have engaged in procreative sex that would pass on the defective allele to his offspring. This is especially true since duchenne muscular dystrophy will typically start to manifest itself in male children around starting around age 4.</span>
Let the time taken be t
average speed= total distance/total time
55=605/t
t=605/55
t=11 hours
(check the calculation once)