Structure of Bacteria | Cells | Biology | FuseSchool
At about 3.5 billion years old, bacteria are one of the oldest living organisms on earth. They are responsible for a range of diseases including cholera, tuberculosis and the plague amongst many others.
But they aren’t all bad; there are trillions of good bacteria living in your gut that are essential to your health. They can produce vitamins, prevent tumour formation, help the immune system fight pathogens and protect against carcinogens, amongst other benefits.
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In this video you'll learn the basics about Ionic Bonds.
The Fuse School is currently running the Chemistry Journey project - a Chemistry Education project by The Fuse School sponsored by Fuse. These videos can be used in a flipped class
In this video, we are going to look at parallel lines. To find the equation of parallel lines, we still use the y=mx + c equation, and because they have the same gradient, we know straight away that the gradient ‘m’ will be the same. We then just need to find the missing y-intercept ‘c’ value.
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Plants have developed responses called tropisms. A tropism is a growth in response to a stimulus; so light and water in the plant’s case.
There are different types of tropisms: Positive tropisms are when growth is towards the stimulus - so the plant growing towards the light to maximise the stimul