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klio [65]
3 years ago
15

A scientist conducting an experiment quickly saw that she was not getting the results she expected. Instead of continuing to col

lect data, she went back to redesign the experiment until the data came out the way that the hypothesis predicted. The scientist’s work did not follow the scientific method. Explain the situation.
Biology
2 answers:
vovangra [49]3 years ago
5 0
Answer: She failed to look at the data objectively by trying to get a desired result.

The situation shows that the scientist already has some expected result in mind probably the experiment is done only to validate his assumptions however, when he did not get it right the first time he deviate from the scientific method and failed to treat the data objectively. 

Over [174]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

it is c on edge

Explanation:

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The pH of the inner thylakoid space has been measured, as have the pH of the stroma and of the cytosol of a particular plant cel
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Answer:

a. the pH within the thylakoid is less than that of the stroma

Explanation:

The pH of thylakoid membrane is 8 at normal conditions but it became highly acidic like 4 during photosynthesis. The electron transport chain utilize the energy released by excited electrons to pump the H+ ions to lumen of thylakoid membrane from stroma during light reaction of photosynthesis. The H+ ions are present in both the stroma and thylakoid membranes. These high potential H+ ions are utilized by ATP synthase complex for the production of ATP.

We know that more the H+ ions lesser will be the pH and lumen have the high concentration of H+ ions. While the pH of stroma is normally kept acidic by plants to create a concentration and potential difference of H+ ions for the production of ATP. That why the lumen have lower pH than stroma of chloroplast.

4 0
3 years ago
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A student investigated how the pressure in a diving pool varied with depth. He filled a
topjm [15]
Pressure of water increases with depth. Thus, the balloon decreases in volume as it is forced deeper. The correct answer is C).
8 0
4 years ago
The base of the pyramid is built from organisms that are primarily
Gnoma [55]

A). They are autotrophs

7 0
3 years ago
Of the sites listed below, which one is the homo erectus site that provides the longest record of habitation
Temka [501]

Answer:

Zhoukoudian

Explanation:

Zhoukoudian can be seen as a cave system which is found in suburban Fangshan District, Beijing in which It has yielded many archaeological discoveries, which include one of the first specimens of Homo erectus , dubbed Peking Man,as well as a fine assemblage of bones of the gigantic hyena Pachycrocuta brevirostris.

The cave was identified as Homo erectus and it said to have more than 10,000 pieces of stoneware, several cinder layers indicating fire use in early man, as well as animal fossils which are from 200 separate species.

Therefore Zhoukoudian is the homo erectus site that provides the longest record of habitation

8 0
3 years ago
When oxygen is available,<br>cellular respiration takes place.​
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Cellular respiration is a process that all living things use to convert glucose into energy. Autotrophs (like plants) produce glucose during photosynthesis. Heterotrophs (like humans) ingest other living things to obtain glucose. While the process can seem complex, this page takes you through the key elements of each part of cellular respiration.

Cellular respiration is a collection of three unique metabolic pathways: glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain. Glycolysis is an anaerobic process, while the other two pathways are aerobic. In order to move from glycolysis to the citric acid cycle, pyruvate molecules (the output of glycolysis) must be oxidized in a process called pyruvate oxidation.

Glycolysis

Glycolysis is the first pathway in cellular respiration. This pathway is anaerobic and takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell. This pathway breaks down 1 glucose molecule and produces 2 pyruvate molecules. There are two halves of glycolysis, with five steps in each half. The first half is known as the “energy requiring” steps. This half splits glucose, and uses up 2 ATP. If the concentration of pyruvate kinase is high enough, the second half of glycolysis can proceed. In the second half, the “energy releasing: steps, 4 molecules of ATP and 2 NADH are released. Glycolysis has a net gain of 2 ATP molecules and 2 NADH.

Some cells (e.g., mature mammalian red blood cells) cannot undergo aerobic respiration, so glycolysis is their only source of ATP. However, most cells undergo pyruvate oxidation and continue to the other pathways of cellular respiration.

Pyruvate Oxidation

In eukaryotes, pyruvate oxidation takes place in the mitochondria. Pyruvate oxidation can only happen if oxygen is available. In this process, the pyruvate created by glycolysis is oxidized. In this oxidation process, a carboxyl group is removed from pyruvate, creating acetyl groups, which compound with coenzyme A (CoA) to form acetyl CoA. This process also releases CO2.

Citric Acid Cycle

The citric acid cycle (also known as the Krebs cycle) is the second pathway in cellular respiration, and it also takes place in the mitochondria. The rate of the cycle is controlled by ATP concentration. When there is more ATP available, the rate slows down; when there is less ATP the rate increases. This pathway is a closed loop: the final step produces the compound needed for the first step.

The citric acid cycle is considered an aerobic pathway because the NADH and FADH2 it produces act as temporary electron storage compounds, transferring their electrons to the next pathway (electron transport chain), which uses atmospheric oxygen. Each turn of the citric acid cycle provides a net gain of CO2, 1 GTP or ATP, and 3 NADH and 1 FADH2.

Electron Transport Chain

Most ATP from glucose is generated in the electron transport chain. It is the only part of cellular respiration that directly consumes oxygen; however, in some prokaryotes, this is an anaerobic pathway. In eukaryotes, this pathway takes place in the inner mitochondrial membrane. In prokaryotes it occurs in the plasma membrane.

The electron transport chain is made up of 4 proteins along the membrane and a proton pump. A cofactor shuttles electrons between proteins I–III. If NAD is depleted, skip I: FADH2 starts on II. In chemiosmosis, a proton pump takes hydrogens from inside mitochondria to the outside; this spins the “motor” and the phosphate groups attach to that. The movement changes from ADP to ATP, creating 90% of ATP obtained from aerobic glucose catabolism.

7 0
3 years ago
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