Question
a blood is placed in a HYPOTONIC Solution, what will most likely happen to the cell? moves into the cell causing it to burst salt moves into the cell causing it to burst moves out of the cell causing it to shrink moves out of the cell causing it to shrink
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
When blood cells are placed in a hypotonic solution, water will move into the cells due to osmosis. In a hypotonic solution, the concentration of solutes outside the cell is lower than that inside the cell, leading to water moving into the cell to balance the concentration. As a result, the cells may swell and, if the influx of water continues, they can eventually burst (hemolysis).
So, the correct outcome is that **water moves into the cell causing it to burst**.
So, the correct outcome is that **water moves into the cell causing it to burst**.