Cells Answers
How do I add text to one cell and have another cells fill automatically, using Excel 3?
Q. I have made a form using Excel 3 and two cells will have the same information. How can I set it up to manually fill in one cell and the second cell will auto fill ?
Asked by DY - Fri Aug 13 15:37:09 2010 - Software - 1 Answers - Comments
A. You want to enter for example 125 in cell C8. You want 125 to appear automatically in cell C12. In C12 enter =C8 and press enter. Now anything you enter in C8 will also appear in C12. I do not know excell 3, must be very old, but this is a very basic entry in Excell, so I guess that it will work.
Answered by Trevor H - Fri Aug 13 16:05:59 2010
Q. I have made a form using Excel 3 and two cells will have the same information. How can I set it up to manually fill in one cell and the second cell will auto fill ?
Asked by DY - Fri Aug 13 15:37:09 2010 - Software - 1 Answers - Comments
A. You want to enter for example 125 in cell C8. You want 125 to appear automatically in cell C12. In C12 enter =C8 and press enter. Now anything you enter in C8 will also appear in C12. I do not know excell 3, must be very old, but this is a very basic entry in Excell, so I guess that it will work.
Answered by Trevor H - Fri Aug 13 16:05:59 2010
How do I combine adjacent cells from two different columns in MS Excel?
Q. I need to combine characters from two different columns - the second column needs to be added to the characters in the 1st column. For example, column A has cells containing the letter G" and column B has cells containing letter "H". I need to combine the two columns so that the cells in column A now read "GH". How can I do this? Is there a formula I can use?
Asked by Jihanemo - Fri Dec 14 12:35:14 2007 - Other - Business & Finance - 2 Answers - Comments
A. You can either right justify column A and left justify column B or you can merge them at the risk of losing and thus typing out all the data in column B.
Answered by ///D - Fri Dec 14 12:41:51 2007
Q. I need to combine characters from two different columns - the second column needs to be added to the characters in the 1st column. For example, column A has cells containing the letter G" and column B has cells containing letter "H". I need to combine the two columns so that the cells in column A now read "GH". How can I do this? Is there a formula I can use?
Asked by Jihanemo - Fri Dec 14 12:35:14 2007 - Other - Business & Finance - 2 Answers - Comments
A. You can either right justify column A and left justify column B or you can merge them at the risk of losing and thus typing out all the data in column B.
Answered by ///D - Fri Dec 14 12:41:51 2007
How do body cells transform oxygen into carbon dioxide?
Q. I want to know about how the body cells change the gas for the cellular respiration. I already know about the path the gases go through prior to and after they reach the body cells.
Asked by jurasicbunny - Sat May 31 20:54:29 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. The detailed path of the chemical reaction of cell respiration is pretty complicated. The net result is pretty simple and intuitive in that it is like other energy producing reactions we are used to. It is basically burning. The cells take the carbon-containing energetic molecules that are reduced from the food we eat (plants and animals are "organic", carbon containing) and "burns" this carbon with oxygen from breathing. The result from burning carbon is carbon dioxide. This is about the same as burning charcoal in air. Carbon charcoal reacts with oxygen and the result is CO2.
Answered by enginerd - Sat May 31 21:01:41 2008
Q. I want to know about how the body cells change the gas for the cellular respiration. I already know about the path the gases go through prior to and after they reach the body cells.
Asked by jurasicbunny - Sat May 31 20:54:29 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. The detailed path of the chemical reaction of cell respiration is pretty complicated. The net result is pretty simple and intuitive in that it is like other energy producing reactions we are used to. It is basically burning. The cells take the carbon-containing energetic molecules that are reduced from the food we eat (plants and animals are "organic", carbon containing) and "burns" this carbon with oxygen from breathing. The result from burning carbon is carbon dioxide. This is about the same as burning charcoal in air. Carbon charcoal reacts with oxygen and the result is CO2.
Answered by enginerd - Sat May 31 21:01:41 2008
How is it that the cells in different body tissues are able to perform different functions?
Q. A. The cells exhibit different patterns of gene expression B. The nutrient preferences of particular tissues play a role. C. The cells contain different genes. D. The age of the cells making up the tissues plays a role. E. The mutations that have accumulated in the cells of the different tissues control funtions.
Asked by jordynnh - Tue Apr 13 18:47:30 2010 - Biology - 3 Answers - Comments
A. Its A. All cells contain the same exact DNA! What makes them function differently is that different cells express the genes differently, due to genetic markers which turn certain genes on and off.
Answered by Nicole - Tue Apr 13 18:59:25 2010
Q. A. The cells exhibit different patterns of gene expression B. The nutrient preferences of particular tissues play a role. C. The cells contain different genes. D. The age of the cells making up the tissues plays a role. E. The mutations that have accumulated in the cells of the different tissues control funtions.
Asked by jordynnh - Tue Apr 13 18:47:30 2010 - Biology - 3 Answers - Comments
A. Its A. All cells contain the same exact DNA! What makes them function differently is that different cells express the genes differently, due to genetic markers which turn certain genes on and off.
Answered by Nicole - Tue Apr 13 18:59:25 2010
cells???
Q. why do organisms have many cells instead of being made with one gigantic cell?
Asked by Ben - Sun Sep 20 19:53:25 2009 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. A normal sized cell has a large surface area to volume ratio, which makes diffusion of necessary materials in the necessary quantities efficient and fast enough to keep the cell alive and functioning normally. If the cell was the size of a person, it would have a very small surface area to volume ratio and would have extreme difficulty getting adequate resources to function.
Answered by shadowonthesun - Sun Sep 20 20:05:37 2009
Q. why do organisms have many cells instead of being made with one gigantic cell?
Asked by Ben - Sun Sep 20 19:53:25 2009 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. A normal sized cell has a large surface area to volume ratio, which makes diffusion of necessary materials in the necessary quantities efficient and fast enough to keep the cell alive and functioning normally. If the cell was the size of a person, it would have a very small surface area to volume ratio and would have extreme difficulty getting adequate resources to function.
Answered by shadowonthesun - Sun Sep 20 20:05:37 2009
What is unique to only the sperm cell? What cells does the sperm cell interact with in the human body?
Q. What distinguishes the sperm cell from other cells? I know that it has an acrosome but I can't come up with anything else. And also, what other cells in the human does it directly and indirectly interact with? Obviously it interacts with the egg cell but what else and how?
Asked by Number Ten - Sun Oct 14 16:44:15 2007 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. it has half the amount of chromosomes, and it interacts with the egg cell
Answered by AnnA - Sun Oct 14 17:20:50 2007
Q. What distinguishes the sperm cell from other cells? I know that it has an acrosome but I can't come up with anything else. And also, what other cells in the human does it directly and indirectly interact with? Obviously it interacts with the egg cell but what else and how?
Asked by Number Ten - Sun Oct 14 16:44:15 2007 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. it has half the amount of chromosomes, and it interacts with the egg cell
Answered by AnnA - Sun Oct 14 17:20:50 2007
How can I make a formula repeat in intervals of 6 cells, grabbing the values input in those intervals?
Q. I am making an interpolation between two cells by getting the difference between two cells separated by five cells, and dividing by 6, then adding that fraction of a difference to the cell with the next oldest value. So it's the fraction difference plus a changing next oldest value, until it reaches the sixth cell. I need to repeat this interpolation for several 6 cell intervals. I was thinking maybe a macro with a loop to repeat this would help, but I don't know how to make an iteration happen for intervals of six.
Asked by simba056 - Fri Sep 18 11:47:53 2009 - Engineering - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Using Excel, I've interpolated between the black test values, resulting in blue and green intermediate "answer" values. see graphic here: The formulas I entered are shown above each group of answers. For the blue answer set, I tried to do exactly as you requested (advancing previous results to the "next" cell). For the green answer set, I used a simplified method of direct division for each cell (thereby not needing the previous answerers). Within Excel, it didn't matter which method was used, the results were the same.
Answered by Redwin88 - Mon Sep 21 10:19:51 2009
Q. I am making an interpolation between two cells by getting the difference between two cells separated by five cells, and dividing by 6, then adding that fraction of a difference to the cell with the next oldest value. So it's the fraction difference plus a changing next oldest value, until it reaches the sixth cell. I need to repeat this interpolation for several 6 cell intervals. I was thinking maybe a macro with a loop to repeat this would help, but I don't know how to make an iteration happen for intervals of six.
Asked by simba056 - Fri Sep 18 11:47:53 2009 - Engineering - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Using Excel, I've interpolated between the black test values, resulting in blue and green intermediate "answer" values. see graphic here: The formulas I entered are shown above each group of answers. For the blue answer set, I tried to do exactly as you requested (advancing previous results to the "next" cell). For the green answer set, I used a simplified method of direct division for each cell (thereby not needing the previous answerers). Within Excel, it didn't matter which method was used, the results were the same.
Answered by Redwin88 - Mon Sep 21 10:19:51 2009
What diseases can be cured by stem cells and how would the cells cure those specific diseases?
Q. I need to know which diseases can be cured by Stem Cell treatment. I know that Parkinson's disease can be cured by this form of treatment but I need two other examples. I also need to know exactly how the cells will treat those specific diseases such as how the stem cells would target the motor cortex, causing a more sufficient amount of dopamine to be formed when treating Parkinson's disease. Thanks, Cat.
Asked by Catriin - Wed Sep 8 11:49:01 2010 - Other - Diseases - 1 Answers - Comments
A. There are many hurdles before stem cell implantation can be a potential cure or treatment for Parkinson's disease. At this point skin cells have been used but the long term results are not in yet. Other conditions with a cure potential include diabetes type 1 (juvenile diabetes), ALS, Huntington's disease, Becker Muscular dystrophy (BMD), Down Syndrome, adenpsone deaminase deficiency (ADA-SCID), Gaucher disease type III, Schechman-Bodian-Diamons syndromw (SBDS) There is stem cell treatment for Crohn's disease. Additional reading (I can't do all of your homework) Proprietaty stem cells can prevent vision loss - retina protection: You can also read this one about PD: The 2nd part of your question can be searched in a normal fashion. If I… [cont.]
Answered by Mags - Thu Sep 9 12:50:33 2010
Q. I need to know which diseases can be cured by Stem Cell treatment. I know that Parkinson's disease can be cured by this form of treatment but I need two other examples. I also need to know exactly how the cells will treat those specific diseases such as how the stem cells would target the motor cortex, causing a more sufficient amount of dopamine to be formed when treating Parkinson's disease. Thanks, Cat.
Asked by Catriin - Wed Sep 8 11:49:01 2010 - Other - Diseases - 1 Answers - Comments
A. There are many hurdles before stem cell implantation can be a potential cure or treatment for Parkinson's disease. At this point skin cells have been used but the long term results are not in yet. Other conditions with a cure potential include diabetes type 1 (juvenile diabetes), ALS, Huntington's disease, Becker Muscular dystrophy (BMD), Down Syndrome, adenpsone deaminase deficiency (ADA-SCID), Gaucher disease type III, Schechman-Bodian-Diamons syndromw (SBDS) There is stem cell treatment for Crohn's disease. Additional reading (I can't do all of your homework) Proprietaty stem cells can prevent vision loss - retina protection: You can also read this one about PD: The 2nd part of your question can be searched in a normal fashion. If I… [cont.]
Answered by Mags - Thu Sep 9 12:50:33 2010
What would it take for human cells to correctly divide and regenerate themselves indefinitely?
Q. Looking at it from the normal biological viewpoint, the reason humans age and eventually die is that cells, over time, slowly lose their ability to correctly divide and regenerate themselves. As time passes, cells lose small but cumulative portions of their ability to divide correctly and with fidelity to the original. That is allegedly why we age and eventually die (if of normal causes). On the other hand, we have cancer... cells that refuse to die, continue dividing indefinitely but do so with deadly mutations and changes that produce cells that become malignant tumors, etc. Is it possible for cells to be able to regenerate and reproduce indefinitely but do so without losing the ability to correctly replicate the original cell? What… [cont.]
Asked by flybd5 - Tue Apr 8 17:05:25 2008 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. There are at least four conditions that must be meant if a cell is to remain continuously young: 1. It must replicate and repair its DNA with precision. 2. Its telomeres must be lengthen back to normal every so many cell divisions. 3. It must rid itself of oxidents (metabolic toxins). 4. It must mantain its mitochondria (energy source) at peak performance. There are probably other requirments but these are the four primary ones. Aging, it appears, in normal somatic cells is a trade-off made for being differentiated (specialized). In cancer, becoming immortal is a result of dedifferentiation (becoming unspecialized). It seems that the nature of cancer cells and that of normal somatic cells are diametrically opposites. Cancer cells attempt… [cont.]
Answered by Bob D - Tue Apr 8 18:04:38 2008
Q. Looking at it from the normal biological viewpoint, the reason humans age and eventually die is that cells, over time, slowly lose their ability to correctly divide and regenerate themselves. As time passes, cells lose small but cumulative portions of their ability to divide correctly and with fidelity to the original. That is allegedly why we age and eventually die (if of normal causes). On the other hand, we have cancer... cells that refuse to die, continue dividing indefinitely but do so with deadly mutations and changes that produce cells that become malignant tumors, etc. Is it possible for cells to be able to regenerate and reproduce indefinitely but do so without losing the ability to correctly replicate the original cell? What… [cont.]
Asked by flybd5 - Tue Apr 8 17:05:25 2008 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. There are at least four conditions that must be meant if a cell is to remain continuously young: 1. It must replicate and repair its DNA with precision. 2. Its telomeres must be lengthen back to normal every so many cell divisions. 3. It must rid itself of oxidents (metabolic toxins). 4. It must mantain its mitochondria (energy source) at peak performance. There are probably other requirments but these are the four primary ones. Aging, it appears, in normal somatic cells is a trade-off made for being differentiated (specialized). In cancer, becoming immortal is a result of dedifferentiation (becoming unspecialized). It seems that the nature of cancer cells and that of normal somatic cells are diametrically opposites. Cancer cells attempt… [cont.]
Answered by Bob D - Tue Apr 8 18:04:38 2008
How does the genetic make up of cells that result from mitosis differ from the parent cell?
Q. A:Cells that result from mitosis contain more genetic information than the parent cell. B:Cells that result from mitosis are much larger than the parent cell. C:Cells that result from mitosis carry less genetic information than the parent cell. D:The genetic make up of cells that result from mitosis is identical to that of the parent cell.
Asked by Alice Cullen - Sun Jul 10 17:42:56 2011 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. D:The genetic make up of cells that result from mitosis is identical to that of the parent cell. "Mitosis is the process by which a eukaryotic cell separates the chromosomes in its cell nucleus into two identical sets in two nuclei." This is save for any replication errors that may occur. Only through meiosis do daughter cells become significantly different from their parents.
Answered by Religulous - Sun Jul 10 17:51:00 2011
Q. A:Cells that result from mitosis contain more genetic information than the parent cell. B:Cells that result from mitosis are much larger than the parent cell. C:Cells that result from mitosis carry less genetic information than the parent cell. D:The genetic make up of cells that result from mitosis is identical to that of the parent cell.
Asked by Alice Cullen - Sun Jul 10 17:42:56 2011 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. D:The genetic make up of cells that result from mitosis is identical to that of the parent cell. "Mitosis is the process by which a eukaryotic cell separates the chromosomes in its cell nucleus into two identical sets in two nuclei." This is save for any replication errors that may occur. Only through meiosis do daughter cells become significantly different from their parents.
Answered by Religulous - Sun Jul 10 17:51:00 2011
What problem do larger cells need to overcome in order to exist?
Q. Also, List two ways that larger cells circumvent this problem. I have thought about and looked at this question, what I come up with is that larger cells are not usually photosynthetic so they have to get some means of energy - so they would eat something photosynthetic for nutrition??? I don't think thats it, and I can't come up with a second way to circumvent the problem. Thanks for any help.
Asked by jaja - Sat Sep 26 00:37:26 2009 - Biology - 3 Answers - Comments
A. They must overcome the fact that, as they get larger, their surface-to--volume ratio becomes so small that simple diffusion can't take care of their needs (there's not enough surface area for things to come and go in satisfactory quantities).
Answered by Asst Prof - Sat Sep 26 01:15:24 2009
Q. Also, List two ways that larger cells circumvent this problem. I have thought about and looked at this question, what I come up with is that larger cells are not usually photosynthetic so they have to get some means of energy - so they would eat something photosynthetic for nutrition??? I don't think thats it, and I can't come up with a second way to circumvent the problem. Thanks for any help.
Asked by jaja - Sat Sep 26 00:37:26 2009 - Biology - 3 Answers - Comments
A. They must overcome the fact that, as they get larger, their surface-to--volume ratio becomes so small that simple diffusion can't take care of their needs (there's not enough surface area for things to come and go in satisfactory quantities).
Answered by Asst Prof - Sat Sep 26 01:15:24 2009
How soon after the first cells in the primordial soup were the first plant cells and plant life evolved?
Q. I have only a high school biology understanding, so please do not be afraid to give a very thorough answer. So from the first cell created, bacteria or something else, how did plant cells come to be? Plant cells would have had to come on quite earlier than animals requiring respiration due to the inhabitable atmosphere. And would it have been difficult for the cells in the primordial soup to be in water later?
Asked by John - Thu May 6 20:50:05 2010 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. Plants came quite late. Cyanobacteria, related to the chloroplasts in plant cells, appeared about one billion years after life formed and caused the "Great Oxygenation Event". The oxygen wiped out most life that was used to a reducing atmosphere. Most living cells have enzymes to deactivate the toxicity of oxygen unless they live in oxygen-poor environments. The term "primordial soup" is becoming antiquated, and is not really applicable. The complex mixture of organic compounds in the oceans prior to the appearance of life had been consumed by bacteria long before oxygenic photosynthesis changed the mix of dissolved gases. The earliest algae came at least 300 million years after cyanobacteria and true plants did not… [cont.]
Answered by novangelis - Fri May 7 03:42:31 2010
Q. I have only a high school biology understanding, so please do not be afraid to give a very thorough answer. So from the first cell created, bacteria or something else, how did plant cells come to be? Plant cells would have had to come on quite earlier than animals requiring respiration due to the inhabitable atmosphere. And would it have been difficult for the cells in the primordial soup to be in water later?
Asked by John - Thu May 6 20:50:05 2010 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. Plants came quite late. Cyanobacteria, related to the chloroplasts in plant cells, appeared about one billion years after life formed and caused the "Great Oxygenation Event". The oxygen wiped out most life that was used to a reducing atmosphere. Most living cells have enzymes to deactivate the toxicity of oxygen unless they live in oxygen-poor environments. The term "primordial soup" is becoming antiquated, and is not really applicable. The complex mixture of organic compounds in the oceans prior to the appearance of life had been consumed by bacteria long before oxygenic photosynthesis changed the mix of dissolved gases. The earliest algae came at least 300 million years after cyanobacteria and true plants did not… [cont.]
Answered by novangelis - Fri May 7 03:42:31 2010
What type of cells tend to be damaged the most during chemotherapy and radiation treatments?
Q. What type of cells tend to be damaged the most during chemotherapy and radiation treatments? Epithelial cells? Nerve tissue? Skeletal muscle cells ? Collagen and fibrous tissue ?
Asked by - Fri Aug 13 07:48:21 2010 - Cancer - 2 Answers - Comments
A. Cancer cells and any other cells that divide rapidly. TV
Answered by tvsinesperanto - Fri Aug 13 07:52:09 2010
Q. What type of cells tend to be damaged the most during chemotherapy and radiation treatments? Epithelial cells? Nerve tissue? Skeletal muscle cells ? Collagen and fibrous tissue ?
Asked by - Fri Aug 13 07:48:21 2010 - Cancer - 2 Answers - Comments
A. Cancer cells and any other cells that divide rapidly. TV
Answered by tvsinesperanto - Fri Aug 13 07:52:09 2010
What is usually connected to photovoltaic cells?
Q. I am doing some coursework on photovoltaic cells. But i need to know where electricity goes after it has been genereated by the photovoltaic cell. A couple of other things; Is the electricty sent thorugh an amplifier so that the voltage can be increased? What sort of voltages are produced from average sunlight by the PV cell? Since I will be using a light bulb to replicate the Sun, what sort of distance shall i have the bulb/what power bulb shall I use? Thanks a lot.
Asked by qwerty_singh - Tue Jan 15 12:52:40 2008 - Physics - 1 Answers - Comments
A. a) to whatever is connected to dra some current from it. b) possibly, but at the cost of current. c) anything from nought upwards. depends on the area exposed to the sunlight. d) very close, but not a great idea. the wavelength spectrum of ordinary globes is much narrower and more selective than sunlight, so you're likely to make use of only a fraction of the efficiency of your PV cell.
Answered by clavdivs - Tue Jan 15 13:04:33 2008
Q. I am doing some coursework on photovoltaic cells. But i need to know where electricity goes after it has been genereated by the photovoltaic cell. A couple of other things; Is the electricty sent thorugh an amplifier so that the voltage can be increased? What sort of voltages are produced from average sunlight by the PV cell? Since I will be using a light bulb to replicate the Sun, what sort of distance shall i have the bulb/what power bulb shall I use? Thanks a lot.
Asked by qwerty_singh - Tue Jan 15 12:52:40 2008 - Physics - 1 Answers - Comments
A. a) to whatever is connected to dra some current from it. b) possibly, but at the cost of current. c) anything from nought upwards. depends on the area exposed to the sunlight. d) very close, but not a great idea. the wavelength spectrum of ordinary globes is much narrower and more selective than sunlight, so you're likely to make use of only a fraction of the efficiency of your PV cell.
Answered by clavdivs - Tue Jan 15 13:04:33 2008
How are hormones distributed to tissues, and what determines which cells a hormone will affect?
Q. How are hormones distributed to tissues, and what determines which cells a hormone will affect? A) They are carried throughout the body in the bloodstream, and each hormone affects the target cells responsive to it. B) They are carried to specific organs by lymphatic vessels and affect the cells in those organs. C) They are carried to specific organs by ducts and affect the cells in those organs. D) They are delivered by neurosecretory cells to specific tissues and cells, which are affected. E) They are distributed locally in the interstitial fluid and affect nearby responsive target cells.
Asked by Lulu - Sun Mar 22 15:56:29 2009 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. A) They are carried throughout the body in the bloodstream, and each hormone affects the target cells responsive to it.
Answered by Peter S - Mon Mar 23 06:05:25 2009
Q. How are hormones distributed to tissues, and what determines which cells a hormone will affect? A) They are carried throughout the body in the bloodstream, and each hormone affects the target cells responsive to it. B) They are carried to specific organs by lymphatic vessels and affect the cells in those organs. C) They are carried to specific organs by ducts and affect the cells in those organs. D) They are delivered by neurosecretory cells to specific tissues and cells, which are affected. E) They are distributed locally in the interstitial fluid and affect nearby responsive target cells.
Asked by Lulu - Sun Mar 22 15:56:29 2009 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. A) They are carried throughout the body in the bloodstream, and each hormone affects the target cells responsive to it.
Answered by Peter S - Mon Mar 23 06:05:25 2009
What are the new cells that form as germ cells start to copy called?
Q. What are the new cells that form as germ cells start to copy called? A. Oocyte B. Primary oocyte C. Ovum D. Oogonium E. Secondary oocyte sorry iam asking i was not sure and i didnt want to get it wrong!:( thankks.
Asked by jG - Thu May 22 09:28:56 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. pls ask ur question properly i think u asked wt that cells called from which female germ cell develop taht initial stage of cell is called oogonium then it divides mitotically to form p.oocyte.then p.oocyte develop meoitically to produce sec.oocyte this division go as far metaphase.but in males germinal cells produce cells grow and form p.spermocyte then it divides meoptically and fom sec.spermocyte or spermitds
Answered by joy happy - Thu May 22 09:45:32 2008
Q. What are the new cells that form as germ cells start to copy called? A. Oocyte B. Primary oocyte C. Ovum D. Oogonium E. Secondary oocyte sorry iam asking i was not sure and i didnt want to get it wrong!:( thankks.
Asked by jG - Thu May 22 09:28:56 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. pls ask ur question properly i think u asked wt that cells called from which female germ cell develop taht initial stage of cell is called oogonium then it divides mitotically to form p.oocyte.then p.oocyte develop meoitically to produce sec.oocyte this division go as far metaphase.but in males germinal cells produce cells grow and form p.spermocyte then it divides meoptically and fom sec.spermocyte or spermitds
Answered by joy happy - Thu May 22 09:45:32 2008
Why does a living organism have different types of cells?
Q. Your body is made of about 10 trillion cells. The largest human cells are about the diameter of a human hair, but most human cells are smaller -- perhaps one-tenth of the diameter of a human hair. Run your fingers through your hair now and look at a single strand. It is not very thick -- maybe 100 microns in diameter (a micron is a millionth of a meter, so 100 microns is a tenth of a millimeter). A typical human cell might be one-tenth of the diameter of your hair (10 microns). Look down at your little toe -- it might represent 2 or 3 billion cells or so, depending on how big you are. Imagine a whole house filled with baby peas. If the house is your little toe, the peas are the cells. That's a lot of cells! At a microscopic level, we are… [cont.]
Asked by glamorus chick - Mon May 1 12:31:38 2006 - Other - Science - 4 Answers - Comments
A. The six characteristics of living things, and an explanation of each one. Theme #1 - Cells All living things are composed of one or more cells. Different types of cells have different "jobs" within the organism. Each life form begins from one cell, which then will split. These cells split, and so on. After this has happened several times, differentiation is undergone, when the cells change so that they are not the same thing anymore. Then they are used to begin to put together the final organism, some cells, for example, as the eyes, some as the heart, etc. The only arguable exception to this is viruses. They are not composed of cells, but are said to be "living." Theme#2 - Organization Complex organization patterns are… [cont.]
Answered by Strawberry - Mon May 1 12:40:09 2006
Q. Your body is made of about 10 trillion cells. The largest human cells are about the diameter of a human hair, but most human cells are smaller -- perhaps one-tenth of the diameter of a human hair. Run your fingers through your hair now and look at a single strand. It is not very thick -- maybe 100 microns in diameter (a micron is a millionth of a meter, so 100 microns is a tenth of a millimeter). A typical human cell might be one-tenth of the diameter of your hair (10 microns). Look down at your little toe -- it might represent 2 or 3 billion cells or so, depending on how big you are. Imagine a whole house filled with baby peas. If the house is your little toe, the peas are the cells. That's a lot of cells! At a microscopic level, we are… [cont.]
Asked by glamorus chick - Mon May 1 12:31:38 2006 - Other - Science - 4 Answers - Comments
A. The six characteristics of living things, and an explanation of each one. Theme #1 - Cells All living things are composed of one or more cells. Different types of cells have different "jobs" within the organism. Each life form begins from one cell, which then will split. These cells split, and so on. After this has happened several times, differentiation is undergone, when the cells change so that they are not the same thing anymore. Then they are used to begin to put together the final organism, some cells, for example, as the eyes, some as the heart, etc. The only arguable exception to this is viruses. They are not composed of cells, but are said to be "living." Theme#2 - Organization Complex organization patterns are… [cont.]
Answered by Strawberry - Mon May 1 12:40:09 2006
How is the process of cytokinesis different in plant cells than in animal cells?
Q. How is the process of cytokinesis different in plant cells than in animal cells? A. Plant cells form a cell plate. B. Animal cells form a cell plate. C. Vacuoles complete the process. D. The two new daughter cells aren't exactly alike.
Asked by woaaaaaaaaaaa - Mon Oct 12 08:14:14 2009 - Biology - 4 Answers - Comments
A. A. Plant cells form a cell plate.
Answered by Peter S - Mon Oct 12 08:42:37 2009
Q. How is the process of cytokinesis different in plant cells than in animal cells? A. Plant cells form a cell plate. B. Animal cells form a cell plate. C. Vacuoles complete the process. D. The two new daughter cells aren't exactly alike.
Asked by woaaaaaaaaaaa - Mon Oct 12 08:14:14 2009 - Biology - 4 Answers - Comments
A. A. Plant cells form a cell plate.
Answered by Peter S - Mon Oct 12 08:42:37 2009
How do memory cells work in triggering the secondary immune response?
Q. I know that they make the secondary response more rapid, but how? do they differentiate into plasma cells to make the antibodies themselves, or do they trigger the production of more plasma cells?
Asked by SB1 - Mon Apr 20 15:45:07 2009 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. well the first time that your body encounters the pathogen it has an innate immune response and the attack is not specific for the pathogen that is invading and it can only distinguish self vs non-self. If this does not work your body releases more serious attacks which is T cells. T cells activate B cells. Your body makes a history book and records this specific battle by making memory B cells. B cells are responsible for making antibodies. So the second time your body encounters this same pathogen it does not have to go through this whole long process. It will just clone the memory B cells which contain the antibodies causing lots of antibody production...thus the quick response =)
Answered by roxy_k88 - Mon Apr 20 16:54:46 2009
Q. I know that they make the secondary response more rapid, but how? do they differentiate into plasma cells to make the antibodies themselves, or do they trigger the production of more plasma cells?
Asked by SB1 - Mon Apr 20 15:45:07 2009 - Biology - 2 Answers - Comments
A. well the first time that your body encounters the pathogen it has an innate immune response and the attack is not specific for the pathogen that is invading and it can only distinguish self vs non-self. If this does not work your body releases more serious attacks which is T cells. T cells activate B cells. Your body makes a history book and records this specific battle by making memory B cells. B cells are responsible for making antibodies. So the second time your body encounters this same pathogen it does not have to go through this whole long process. It will just clone the memory B cells which contain the antibodies causing lots of antibody production...thus the quick response =)
Answered by roxy_k88 - Mon Apr 20 16:54:46 2009
How do cells in multicellular organisms differ from other groups of cells?
Q. a. cells in multicellular oranisms are all indentical. b. cells in multicellular oranisms all adhere to one another c. cells in multicellular oranisms depend on one another for survival. d. cells in multicellular oranisms are each unique. this is biology work, thanks.
Asked by Olivia - Thu Dec 4 19:59:03 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. im guessing "other groups of cells" means single celled organisms, in that case it is b. they adhere with laminin.
Answered by Echo Scout Dog - Thu Dec 4 20:56:50 2008
Q. a. cells in multicellular oranisms are all indentical. b. cells in multicellular oranisms all adhere to one another c. cells in multicellular oranisms depend on one another for survival. d. cells in multicellular oranisms are each unique. this is biology work, thanks.
Asked by Olivia - Thu Dec 4 19:59:03 2008 - Biology - 1 Answers - Comments
A. im guessing "other groups of cells" means single celled organisms, in that case it is b. they adhere with laminin.
Answered by Echo Scout Dog - Thu Dec 4 20:56:50 2008
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'cells'
Sun Jan 22 21:15:13 2012
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'It's a win-win': Cancer survivor Suzanne Somers gets cutting edge breast ...
Sat, 04 Feb 2012 14:06:20 -0800
By Ann Pride Breast cancer survivor Suzanne Somers has revealed she underwent an experimental stem cell procedure to reconstruct her breasts. The 65-year-old television icon said the cutting edge procedure used fat cells from her stomach to improve her ...
Sat, 04 Feb 2012 14:06:20 -0800
By Ann Pride Breast cancer survivor Suzanne Somers has revealed she underwent an experimental stem cell procedure to reconstruct her breasts. The 65-year-old television icon said the cutting edge procedure used fat cells from her stomach to improve her ...
Studying Cells Tutorial - The Biology Project
Because of the limitations of the human eye, much of the early biological research concentrated on developing tools to help us see very small things.
www.biology.arizona.edu/cell_bio/tutorials/cells/cells3.html
Because of the limitations of the human eye, much of the early biological research concentrated on developing tools to help us see very small things.
www.biology.arizona.edu/cell_bio/tutorials/cells/cells3.html
Cell
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Cells) Jump to: navigation, search Look up cell in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Cell(s) may refer to:Contents
Science and technology
- Cell (biology), the functional basic unit of life
- Cell (EDA), a term used in a ronic circuit design schematics
- Cell (geometry), a three-dimensional element, part of a higher-dimensional object
- Cell (journal), a scientific journal
- Cell (microprocessor), a microprocessor architecture developed by Sony, Toshiba, and IBM
- Cell, the basic unit of Flash memory
- Cell or mobile phone, a phone connected to a cellular network
- Cell, area of radio coverage in a cellular network
- Cell, an basic unit of a cellular automaton
- Cell, an individual production area in cellular manufacturing
- Cell, a fixed-length packet in a cell relay communication network
- Voltaic cell, a device for producing electricity, including
- Electrochemical cell, a device for extracting electricity from chemical reactions, often used as part of a battery
- Photo-electric or solar cell
- Storm cell, an updraft region in a thunderstorm
- Table cell, the intersection of a row and a column in a table of information
Music
- Cells (album), a 1998 electronic music album by Cex
- "Cells", a song by The Servant
- Cell (ambient artist), an ambient artist from France
- Cell (band), a rock band
- Cell (music), a rhythmic, melodic, motivic, or intervallic group, set, or figure
Fiction
- Cell (comics), a Marvel comic book character
- Cell, a character in Dragon Ball media
- Cell (novel), a 2006 horror novel by Stephen King
Society
- Prison cell, a room used to hold people in prisons
- Cell, a unit of a clandestine cell system, a penetration-resistant form of a secret or outlawed organization
- Cell, a group of people in a cell group
Religion
See also
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.[Hide]▲