Answer: On a cool October morning you dressed warmly for a 10K race sponsored by a local charity, and about half way through the race you realize that you have stopped sweating in all the warm running clothes you put on and are beginning to feel faint and slightly disoriented. The most likely reason of his symptoms are that <em><u>you are suffering a dehydration followed by possible hypothermia.</u></em>
Explanation:
If you <u>run dehydrated</u>, your <em>heart system</em> will be struggling in poor conditions, so it will be overexposed and your heart rate will rise considerably. On the other hand, <em>the body will not be as efficient in regulating body temperature.</em>
Your <u>muscles and your brain </u>as well as the entire <u>nervous system </u>will not respond the same and will be demanded in conditions not suitable for your effort, therefore, the response time will fall, you may suffer cramps, headache, dizziness and even muscle spasms . If the effort is more than two hours long, you probably need more than water and you should try <u>sports drinks </u>also.
When running at <em>low temperatures</em>, a relevant factor is <em>clothing.</em> If we are not <u>properly dressed to run</u> in cold and windy conditions, we will naturally be more exposed to suffer from <em>hypothermia.</em> The manifestations of hypothermia are varied and include pain and tingling in the hands and feet, tremors or chills, decreased physical capacity and, in more extreme cases, alterations of consciousness.
A person who is suffering from hypothermia should wrap in dry clothes and get out of exposure to cold or wind , hydrating with warm liquids can also be useful.
Two sister chromatids are held together by the centromere
<h3>The Chromosome</h3>
The chromosome consists of 2 sister chromatids that are linked together by a structure known as the centromere.
Each of the sister chromatids carries an allele of the same gene.
The link between the two sister chromatids is broken at the anaphase stage of the cell division when spindle fibers pull them apart towards opposite poles within the cell.
More on the chromosome can be found here: brainly.com/question/296477
Answer:
Radiolabeled carbon atom in CO2
Explanation:
Photosynthesis is the process by which green plants fix the atmospheric CO2 into glucose. The process includes carbon fixation during which RuBisCo enzyme catalyzes the reaction of CO2 and a five-carbon compound called RuBP to form 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PGA). The 3-PGA enters the reduction phase of the Calvin cycle wherein it is reduced into glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. Two molecules of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate make one molecule of glucose.
To test the hypothesis that glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate from photosynthesis is used by plants to synthesize lipids, radiolabeled CO2 must be used. The radiolabeled carbon atom in the CO2 would be fixed in the form of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. If the plant uses glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate as a precursor for lipid synthesis, the synthesized lipid molecules would carry the radiolabeled carbon atom.