When both water and salts are present in a solution and the cell needs water, which process enables the cell to obtain the water without the salt?

Question 1 options:

osmosis through a permeable membrane

diffusion through a permeable membrane

osmosis through a semipermeable membrane

diffusion through a nuclear membrane

1 answer

The correct answer is:

osmosis through a semipermeable membrane

Osmosis is the process by which water moves through a semipermeable membrane from an area of lower solute concentration (more water) to an area of higher solute concentration (less water) in order to equalize the concentrations on both sides. In this case, the semipermeable membrane allows water to pass through while preventing the salts from doing so.