The process of breaking down glucose.
What is glycolysis?
The types of organisms that use aerobic respiration.
What are eukaryotic organism?
This occurs when there is an equal number of particles on both sides of the membrane.
What is equilibrium?
This process that is known as passive transport and doesn’t use energy, uses protein channels to move molecules down the concentration gradient.
What is facilitated diffusion?
The movement of larger substances in or out of a cell by a vesicle.
What is bulk transport?
The photosynthesis equation flipped is the equation for this.
What is cellular respiration?
The number of ATP made from glycolysis
What is 2?
The cell membrane can control the movement of some things, but not all things. The term to describe it is this.
What is selectively permeable?
This is a channel that moves ions.
What is an ion channel?
When the cell membrane surround a particle, this occurs.
What is endocytosis?
Making ATP is the main function of this process.
What is cellular respiratio?
The first step of this process, which is glycolysis, takes place here.
What is the cytosol?
The phospholipids in a cell membrane have hydrophobic tails. It’s heads are this.
What is hydrophilic?
These transport water.
What are aquaporins?
When a liquid enters a cell through endocytosis.
What is pinocytosis?
After glycolysis there are two options for what will happen. If there is oxygen, the Krebs cycle occurs, if there is no oxygen, this occurs.
What is Fermentation?
The second step of this process, which is the Krebs cycle, takes place here.
What is the matrix?
This is the net movement of particles along the concentration gradient.
What is diffusion?
This is the movement of water from a high water concentration to a low water concentration?
What is osmosis?
When a solid enters a cell through endocytosis it is called this.
What is phagocytosis?
Waster product made after glycolysis.
What is Pyrovate?
The maximum number of ATP that can possibly be made from aerobic respiration is this number.
What is 34?
This exists when there is a difference in concentration of a particular particle on either side of the membrane.
What is a concentration gradient?
Diffusion and facilitated diffusion are both types of this.
What is passive transport?
When a molecule leaves the cell, this occurs.
What is exocytosis?