Your Status: Logged out Log in

How Temperature Effects the Movement of Pigment Through Cell Membranes  

Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Thu Sep 04 2003

Page Preview
Preview
Previous 1 of 11 Next

On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:

HOW TEMPERATURE EFFECTS THE MOVEMENT OF PIGMENT THROUGH CELL MEMBRANES Abstract The experiment below displays the effects of temperature on the pigment in uncooked beetroot cells. The pigment in beetroot cells lies within the cell vacuole and is called anthocyanin, each vacuole is surrounded by a tonoplast membrane and outside it, the cytoplasm is surrounded by the plasma membrane, therefore the foundation of this experiment lies with the temperature at which the membranes will rupture and therefore leak the pigment. To do this a series of uncooked beetroot cylinders will be exposed to different temperatures and then to distilled water at room temperature (24ºC). The colour of the distilled water is the variable here which will show us, using a colorimeter what temperature the membranes splits using the transmission of the water (light passing directly through and the absorbency (light getting absorbed by the anthocyanin molecules). Introduction Within the cells of a beetroot plant,...

Get instant access



  • Instant, unlimited access to our documents in full
  • Swap your work for free access, or pay £4.99
  • To see the full version of this document and 146,168 others
Register Now
OR

Receive email updates for this category



  • Simply tell us your email address and receive a weekly Study Help Email for FREE
  • Receive 3 FREE essay views with each email
  • Get all the latest essays from Coursework.Info & discussion from TheStudentRoom.co.uk