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Grace [21]
3 years ago
13

What changes when unbalanced forces are applied to a moving bike along the direction its moving?

Physics
1 answer:
Rom4ik [11]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

D.velocity

Explanation:

When unbalanced forces are applied to a moving bike along the direction its moving, the velocity of the bike changes.

Unbalanced forces causes a body to accelerate. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with time.

When unbalanced forces acts on a body, the velocity changes.

  • An unbalanced force is a force whose resultant is not zero.
  • Such a force causes a body to change motion and then acceleration.
  • For a body to accelerate, the velocity must change per unit of time.
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PLEASE HELP : What happens in obese mice? (Physiology)
irina1246 [14]

Answer and

Explanation:

The gut microbiota has recently emerged as an important, and previously unappreciated, player in host physiology (1). In particular, the gut microbiota contributes to a variety of physiological and pathophysiological processes in the host including immune disorders (2–4), atherosclerosis (5), irritable bowel syndrome (6, 7), blood pressure regulation (8), and chronic kidney disease (9, 10). Bacteria residing in the human gut are an important component of human physiology: the total wet weight of gut microbes in the human has been estimated to be 175 g–1.5 kg (11, 12), and the cells of the microbiota outnumber human cells by 10:1 (1). These bacteria interact with the immune system of the host (13), and secrete a variety of metabolites, which enter host circulation and can affect a variety of physiological parameters (8, 14), reviewed in Ref. (15). In fact, metabolites produced by the gut microbiota have been found to play key roles in renal disease (16), blood pressure regulation (8), and immune disorders (2–4). Therefore, just as we consider the genetic background of an animal or an individual to be an important contributing factor to their physiology, so too must we consider the genetic background of the microbiota associated with that animal.

Gut microbiota vary greatly amongst laboratory animals, and these differences result in notable differences in experimental results. Mice of the same strain from different vendors have different microbiota profiles (17), and similarly, the same mice housed at different institutions have different microbiota profiles (18, 19). Conversely, inoculating two different inbred mouse strains with the same gut bacteria leads to differences in host gene expression between the two mouse strains (20). Clearly, there is a complex interplay between the genetics of the microbiota and that of the host organism, which has only recently begun to be appreciated.

Go to:

Gut Microbiota as an Experimental Parameter

Examples in the literature have highlighted the important and unexpected ways in which gut microbiota can affect a variety of experimental parameters. In a series of studies, Vijay-Kumar et al. (13, 21) reported that although TLR5 null animals initially had a colitis phenotype, when these mice were “rederived” and their gut microbiota altered, the colitis phenotype was greatly attenuated, and instead the null animals exhibited metabolic syndrome. In addition, Lathrop et al. put forward a model by which T-cells are educated not only by self/non-self mechanisms, but also by microbiota-derived “non-self” antigens (22). Accordingly, they found that the presence or absence of microbiota determined whether T cells would induce colitis in mice. Finally, Yang et al. reported that when the same knockout mice were housed at two different institutions, they had markedly different microbiota profiles – and the mice at one institution (MIT) were quite susceptible to colitis, whereas mice at the other institution (MHH) failed to develop any significant pathology under the same conditions (19). Unequivocally, altering gut microbiota – even by housing animals at different institutions – can have dramatic effects on the phenotype observed.

Go to:

Gut Microbiota and Obesity and Diabetes

It is important to note that not only can microbiota affect host physiology, but the gut microbiota are not necessarily stable over time. Rather, gut microbiota can change or shift as a result of experimental manipulation (in animals) or changes in lifestyle or nutrition (in humans). It is now appreciated that there are “shifts” in microbiota that occur in obesity in mice, rats, and humans (23–26). In one study, Turnbaugh et al. (25) examined human female twin pairs concordant for leanness or obesity, and found that obesity was associated with phylum-level changes in microbiota.

7 0
3 years ago
A hockey player uses her hockey stick to exert a force of 6.81 N on a stationary hockey puck. The hockey puck has a mass of 165
Anna007 [38]

Answer:

41.3 m/s^2 option (e)

Explanation:

force, F = 6.81 N

mass, m = 165 g = 0.165 kg

Let a be the acceleration of the puck.

Use newtons' second law

Force = mass x acceleration

6.81 = 0.165 x a

a = 41.27 m/s^2

a = 41.3 m/s^2

Thus, the acceleration of the puck is 41.3 m/s^2.

5 0
4 years ago
The force applied when using a simple machine
jenyasd209 [6]

Answer:

effort

Explanation:

effort is the answer

7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Take a look at a bicycle with gears. Using what you have just learned, answer the following questions:
Harlamova29_29 [7]

Answer:

answer a: a large front gear with a small back gear

answer b: a small front gear with a large back gear

Explanation:

just simple gearing ratios

4 0
3 years ago
Create a story of a “day in the life of a water drop”. Your story should be creative and include all 6 steps in the water cycle.
pogonyaev

Answer:

Explanation:

Ok so first: the evaporation part, the sun starts to get warmer I ( the water droplet) rises up to the sky to start my evaporation cycle

Condensation: part: when I am in the air I change into a gas and then I change back into a liquid and gather my friends and make a cloud

Precipitation: as it gets to crowded, we can’t hold it anymore, when I cool down I like to sky dive with my cousins, snow, rain, sleet, hail which is called precipitation.

Then finally we land on the ground, we run down hills, and run into lakes surface runoff happens when there’s too many of us so some of us can’t be rain. Infiltration: when some of us soak into the ground cause we can’t make it into the streams and oceans. Ok I can’t help much more cause I’m super busy but if you need more help just message me and I can help thx ! Hope I helped Atleast a bit for you to understand more

5 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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