The type of transport where particles move across a cell membrane without using energy.
What is passive transport?
The process in which a cell membrane engulfs a particle and brings it into the cell.
What is endocytosis?
The process cells use to make energy without oxygen.
What is fermentation?
The paired structures that are duplicated in interphase.
What are chromosomes?
This stage is where the chromosomes line up along the equator.
What is Metaphase?
The fluids that surround and fill a cell are made mostly of this.
What is water?
Two examples of passive transport.
What are diffusion and osmosis?
The pigment found in thylakoids that give plants their green color.
What is chlorophyll?
Pairs of similar chromosomes.
What are homologous chromosomes?
The number of phases in the Cell Cycle?
What is three?
The sac formed around a large particle to allow a cell to take in or remove the particle.
What is a vesicle?
The process that allows water to move through a semipermeable membrane.
What is osmosis?
The organelle that produces energy for the cell.
What is the mitochondria?
This structure forms in plant cells during cytokinesis.
What is a cell plate?
The number of phases in Mitosis.
What is four?
The movement of particles form regions of low concentration to regions of high concentrations.
What is active transport?
The type of membrane that allows some substances to move through it.
What is semipermeable?
What is C6H12O6?
This is what we call the pinching of the animal cell during telophase into cytokinesis.
What is a cleavage furrow?
The name of the fibers that are created by the centrioles and pull the chromosomes apart in anaphase.
What are spindle fibers?
Passageways in a cell membrane.
What are channels?
Osmosis is important to cells because
The life stages of a cell.
What is the cell cycle?
The life stages of a cell.
What is the cell cycle?
This marks the end of the Cell Cycle.
What is cytokinesis?