The answer is a cellular membrane
I think it's when glycogen turns glycogen into glucose and vice versa. Not too sure though.
Scientists use triangulation to find the epicenter of an earthquake. When seismic data is collected from at least three different locations, it can be used to determine the epicenter by where it intersects. Every earthquake is recorded on numerous seismographs located in different directions. Each seismograph records the times when the first (P waves) and second (S waves) seismic waves arrive. From that information, scientists can determine how fast the waves are traveling. Knowing this helps them calculate the distance from the epicenter to each seismograph.
To determine the direction each wave traveled, scientists draw circles around the seismograph locations. The radius of each circle equals the known distance to the epicenter. Where these three circles intersect is the epicenter.
<span>B. Knowledge and valuable resources are shared among scientists.
Being involved in a research community could provide a higher chance to researchers the privilege to avail resources, knowledge and supporting evidences that might relate or support the current study the research wants to delve into.</span>