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study of life, knowlege comes from conduction science observation and experimentation |
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the search for information and explanation |
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describes natural structures and processes (based on observation and analysis of data) |
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a hypothesis is a tentative answer to a well-framed question (leads to predictions that can be tested by observation or experimentation) |
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recorded observations or items of information, often organized into tables and graphs |
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descriptions rather than measurements |
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obersvation hypothesis and predictions methodology/testing results/analysis conculsion/communication |
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a series of ordered groupings at multiple levles within a system |
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result from the arrangement and interaction of parts within a system |
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constructs models for the dynamic behavior of whole biological system |
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that as more of a product accumulates, the process that creates it slows adn less of teh product is produced |
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that as more of a product accumulates, the process that creates it speeds up and more of the product is produced |
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units of inheritance that transmit information from parents to offspring |
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order regulation energy processing growth and development reproduction response to the environment evolutionary adaptation |
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the process of change that has transformed life on Earth |
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Darwin's points about evolution |
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-species showed evidence of descent with modification from common ancestors -natural selection is the mechanism behind descent with modification |
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protons (+) neutrons (0) electrons (-) |
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is approximated by mass number |
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an electron's energy level, based on state of potential energy and distance from nucleus |
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the three dimensional space where an electron is found 90% of the time |
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covalent bonds (polar/nonpolar) ionic bonds hydrogen bonds van der waals interactions |
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the sharing of a pair of valence elctrons by two atoms |
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two or more differnet elements combined |
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an atom's attraction for electrons in a covalent bond (higher electronegativity means pulling more stongly) |
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atoms share electrons equally |
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atoms do not shar electtons equally |
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the attraction between cations and anions (electrons are NOT shared but given up and recieved) |
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a charged atom or molecule |
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compounds formed by ionic bonds |
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a noncovalent attraction between a hydrogen and an electronegative atom |
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van der waals interaction |
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attractions between ever changing regions of positive and negative charge in molecules that are close together |
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hydrogen bonds van der waals interactions, and ionic bonds in water |
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-determines how molecules interact -molecules with similar biological effects |
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when the forward and reverse reaction rates are equal |
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Four emergent properties of water contribute to Earth's fitness for life |
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-cohesive behavior -ability to moderate temperature -expansion upon freezing -versatility as a solvent |
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collectively, hydrogen bonds hold water molecules together |
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an attraction between different substances |
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a measure of how hard it is to break the surface of a liquid (bug walking on water) |
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moderation of temperature |
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-water absorbs heat from warmer air and releases heat to cooler air -water can abosorb or release a large amount of heat with only a slight change in its own temperature |
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a measure of the total amount of kinetic enregy due to molecular motion in a body of matter (depends of matter's volume) |
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a measure of the intensity of heat due to the average kinetic energy of molecules (does not depend on matter's volume) |
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the amount of heat that must be absorbed or lost for 1g of a substance to chang temperature by 1 degree C |
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the heat a liquid must absorb for 1 g to be converted to gas |
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when the remaining surface cools as a liquid evaporates |
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-ice floats on water (ice-hydrogen bonds are more ordered and ice is less dense) |
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a liquid homogeneous mixture of substances |
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substance that is dissolved |
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one in which water is the solvent |
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sphere of water molecules surrounding an ion disolved from an ionic compound in water |
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has an affinity for water (substances that are charged or have charged regions |
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does not have an affinity for water (oil molecules: have relatively nonpolar bonds) |
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a stable suspension of fine particles in a liquid |
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any substance that increases the H+ concentration of a solution (hydrochloric acid) |
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any substance that reduces the H+ concentration of a solution (ammonia, sodium hydroxide) |
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minimize changes in concentration of H+ and OH- in a solution |
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rain, snow, fog with pH < 5.6 |
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when CO2 is realeased by fossil fuel combustion |
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the study of carbon compounds |
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organic molecules of only C and H -components to many organic molecules -can undergo reactions releasinf lots of energy -hydrophobic fuel |
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compounds with same molecular formula, different structures (3kinds) |
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have different covalent arrangements of atoms |
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have same covalent arrangements, different saptial arrangements |
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mirror images of each other |
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the components of organic molecules that are most commonly involved in chemical reactions |
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7 most important functional groups |
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-hydroxyl -carbonyl -carboxyl -amino -sulfhydryl -phosphate -methyl |
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adenosine triphosphate (ATP) |
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primary energy transferring molecule in the cell |
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large molecules, thousands of covalently connected atoms |
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long molecule consisting of many similar building blocks |
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small building bloock molecules |
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dehydration reaction (condensation) |
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when two monomers bond together through the loss of a water molecule |
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macromolecules that speed up the dehydration process |
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a reaction that is the reverse of the dehydration reaction |
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sugars and the polymers of sugars |
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double sugars (monomers formed by glycosidic linkages) |
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polymers of sugars, up to thousands of monosaccharides (have storgage and structural roles) |
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a covalent bond that forms through dehydration to join two monosaccharides into a disaccharide |
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polysaccharides for storage |
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polysaccharides for structure |
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a major component of the tough wall of plant cells |
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another structural polysaccharide, found in arthropod exoskeleton and the cell walls of many fungi |
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-do not form polymers -hydrophobic parts due to nonpolar covalent bonds of hydrocarbon portions -fats, phospholipid, steroid |
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a three-carbon alcohol with a hydroxyl group attached to each carbon |
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a carboxyl groupd attached to a long carbon skeleton |
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a fat molecule that has three acids joined to glycerol by ester linkage |
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a bond between a hydroxyl group and a carbonxyl group |
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have maximum hydrogen atoms possible, no double bonds (solid at room temperature) |
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have one or more double bonds (liquid at room temperature) |
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-saturated fats may contribute through plaque deposits -unsaturated fats with trans double bonds contribute even more |
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two fatty acids and a phosphate group attached to glycerol (make up the cellular membrane, hydrophilic heads and hydrophobic tails) |
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carbon skeleton consisting of four fused rings |
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-a steroid -component in animal cell membranes -essentail in animals |
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the membrane at the boundry of a cell that selectively regulates the cell's chemical composition, made primarily of proteins and lipids |
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allowing some substances to cross more easily than others |
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membrane a fluid structure with a mosaic of embedded protein |
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polymers built from set of 20 amino acids, each with unique linear amino acid sequence |
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large functional molecule with a specific 3D structural arrangement of one or more polypeptide |
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organic molecules with carboxyl and amino groups; differ in properties due to side chains (R groups) |
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unique sequence of amino acids (joined by peptide bonds) |
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coils and folds in a chain (a helix and B pleated sheet) |
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overaldetermined by the R group (includes hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, van der waals interactions, and disulfide bridges) |
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nonpolar side chains pushed away from water, end up in clusters at protein core |
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loss of native structure, unraveling (caused by pH, salt concentration, temperature) |
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protein molecules that assist proper folding of other protein |
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mearsures diffraction of light beams through a crystal to get a 3-D image of electron density |
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nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy |
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-does not require protein crystallization -measures absorption of electromagnetic radiation |
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uses computer programs to predict protein structure from amino acid sequence |
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polymer called polynucleotide |
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chain of monomers called nucleotides |
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consists of a nitrogenous base, a pentose sugar, phosphate group |
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(cytosine,thymine, uracil) single six membered ring |
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(adenine and guanine) six membered ring fused to five-membered ring |
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structure that act as site of protein synthesis |
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an atom's attraction for the electons in a covalent bond |
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organic molecules of only C and H -components to many organic molecules -can undergo reactions releasing lots of energy |
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showed abiotic synthesis of oraganic molecules in atmosphere was possible -resulted in some amino acids adn hydrocarbons |
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eary earth chemical, physical processes may have produced simple cells; sequence of stages |
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-abiotic synthesis of small organic molecules -joining these into macromolecules packaging into protocells -origins of self replication |
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RNA molecules that catalyze many reactions |
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-bacteria -archaea -eukarya |
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Basic features of all cells |
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-plasma membrane -semifliud substance called cytosol -chromosomes -ribosomes |
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-no nucleus -no membrane bound organelles |
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-DNA -membrane bound organelles -cytoplasm -much larger than prokaryotic cells |
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in bacterial cell walls, network of sugar polymers cross linked by polypeptides |
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a polysaccharide or protein layer that covers many prokaryotes |
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allow to stick to substrate or other individual |
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longer than fibriae, allow prokaryotes to exchange DNA |
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metabolically inactive that remain viable in harsh condition for centuries |
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energy source:light carbon source: CO2 types of organisms: photosynthetic prokaryotes; plants, certain protists |
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energy source: inorganic chemicals carbon source: CO2 types or organisms: certain prokaryotes |
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energy source: light carbon source: organic compounds types of organisms: certain prokaryotes |
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energy source: organic compounds carbon source: organic compounds types of organisms: manyu prokaryotes and protists |
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can surive with or withour O2 |
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some prokaryotes can convert atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia |
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live in swamps marshes and produce methane as a waste product |
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photoautotrophs that generate O2 |
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containing hydrophilic and phdrophobic regions (phospholipid) |
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