Lab 3 1. The IIS7 web page appears. 2. The IIS7 web page appears. 3. The default web page for is set to be the IIS7 oage. 4. The detailed error 403.6 Forbidden is displayed. 5. The basic error 403.6 forbidden is displayed. 6. The IIS7 web page is displayed. 7. The error page remains. 8. This is because there is no DNS setup to establish the link between the local address and the address name. Computer Name IP Address Server05B 172.16.5.2 9. The IIS7 web page is displayed. 10. It will not connect
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Erica Osorio 5057497 Christian Roque and Rogerlio The Mechanisms by which E.Coli Cells Developed Immunities toward Ampicillin due to Plasmid and DNA Consumption U34 Abstract During the ampicillin experiment the ability to transform cells to make them adaptable to their environment was studied. The E.coli bacterial cell was used in order to observe how its DNA was able to change and develop immunity towards ampicillin. In order for this change to occur the use of several
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Robert Hooke first looked at a thin slice of cork in 1665; he saw "a lot of little boxes." These little boxes first reminded of the little rooms monks lived in‚ so he called them cells. Hooke observed the same pattern in the stems and roots of carrots and other plants. What Hooke still did not know‚ however‚ was that cells are the basic units of living things. Ten years later‚ the Dutch scientist Anton van Leeuwenhoek focused a microscope on what seemed to be clear pond water and discovered a wondrous
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CO2 you use the color changes. Hypothesis: I believe in this experiment the more you exercise then the more CO2 we exhale from our bodies. Material: 2 test tubes Water Bromothymol Blue Straw Graduated Cylinder Marking Pencil Procedures: Pick a Lab partner Label 2 test tubes‚ one A and one B Add 10 ml of water to each test tube using a graduated cylinder Add 8-12 drops of Bromothymol Blue to each tube One of the pair will gently blow on the solution in the test tube A while using the other partner
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1. Describe the general structure and function of the nervous system. The Nervous System is a "network" which delivers information and monitors the processes taking place in our bodies at all times. The nervous system in all its aspects allows us to function as a single controlled and coordinated unit. The basic nerve cell nerve cell is a neuron; a chain of neurons is actually a "communication cable "inside our bodies. Neuron structure is basically the cell nucleus‚ the dendrites which receive information
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Temperature (°C) Convert to: g NH4Cl 100 mL H2O 1 2g 5.0 44°C 40g NH4Cl 2 2.2g 5.0 50°C 44g NH4Cl 3 2.4g 5.0 57°C 48g NH4Cl 4 2.6g 5.0 61°C 52g NH4Cl 5 2.8g 5.0 66°C 56g NH4Cl Data Table 2: Experiment Results Solubility of NH4Cl (g/100 mL H20) Crystallization Temperature (°C) 40g NH4Cl 44°C 44g NH4Cl 50°C 48g NH4Cl 57°C 52g NH4Cl 61°C 56g NH4Cl 66°C Data Table 3: Solubility Results Compound Mixture Soluble or Insoluble? Distilled H2O + Na2SO4 soluble Corn Oil + Na2SO4
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Testing Cell Transportation Across a Membrane Introduction Cells have the amazing ability to transport certain molecules in or out of their membrane. Some require no energy to do so (passive transport) while others require energy to be processed through (active transport). There is also the transportation of water across a membrane‚ which has its own term of osmosis. Too much of something can be taken in‚ or too little enters. This especially happens to plants‚ who require water (and sun) to live
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observations are repressentative of cell division taking place in the oinon root tip. Firstly‚ this is because our numbers of the number of cells in each phase of mitosis are similar to the rest of the groups‚ so we can assume our results are most likely correct. We can also assume our calculations are right because we know that Interphase is the most active phase in the process of cell divison‚ which would agree with our calculations since we assume that approxiamtly 93% of cells are going though Interphase
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2/14/2015 The RNA World and the Origins of Life - Molecular Biology of the Cell - NCBI Bookshelf NCBI Book sh elf. A ser v ice of t h e Na t ion a l Libr a r y of Medicin e‚ Na t ion a l In st it u t es of Hea lt h . Alberts B‚ Johnson A‚ Lewis J‚ et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 4th edition. New Y ork: Garland Science; 2002. The RNA World and the Origins of Life To fully understand the processes occurring in present-day living cells‚ we need to consider how they arose in evolution. The most
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Observing Onion Cells Science 8 Observing Onion Cells ***Do not write anywhere on this piece of paper!!! It will be used again this afternoon!!!***** Instructions. On a piece of paper‚ write the title (see above)‚ the date‚ your block‚ and your name. Then copy out the problem (see below). Problem. What structures can you observe in an onion cell when using a compound light microscope? Hypothesis. On your lab report‚ below your Problem‚ write a Hypothesis that will
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