All cells have DNA. The DNA does not depend on the difference in size or shape.
The answer is Faults are storing elastic strain. To simplify, seismic gaps are places where scientist think that faults are keeping elastic strain. In addition, scientists think that stress on a fault constructs up to a critical point and is then unconstrained as an earthquake. The seismic gaps are areas in which no earthquakes have occurred over a long period of time and therefore are probable to be under a high volume of stress.
Answer:
Eukaryotic cells typically have circular chromosomes, whereas prokaryotic cells typically have linear chromosomes.
Explanation:
Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells are the two kinds of cells that living organisms are composed of. Eukaryotic cells are cells that possess a membrane-bound nucleus while prokaryotic cells do not possess a membrane-bound nucleus. The cell membrane of eukaryotes contain ester-linked phospholipids, whereas that of prokaryotes (bacteria and archeae) have ether-linked or ester-linked phospholipids.
Peptidoglycan is the major constituent of the cell wall of many prokaryotes (bacteria) while peptidoglycan is absent in the cell wall of eukaryotes that possess it. One notable difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells is the SHAPE OF THEIR CHROMOSOME.
- The chromosome in eukaryotic cells is LINEAR while that in prokaryotic cells is CIRCULAR in shape.
<span>The movement of fluids between cellular compartments is regulated by osmotic and hydrostatic forces.</span>
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Hydrostatic pressure<span> is the force exerted by a fluid against a wall which causes movement of fluid between compartments. This pressure is important for exchanging plasma and nutrients between capillaries and surrounding tissues</span> and also in the nephrons (kidneys) where ensures proper filtering of the blood to form urine.</span> <span>Fluid also moves between compartments along an osmotic gradient (the difference in concentration of solutes on one side of the cell membrane to that on the other side). Water constantly moves into and out of fluid compartments via osmotic gradient.</span>