Percentage = Base x Rate
There are three base pairs in each amino acid. If you have 1500 base pairs you would have 500 amino acids.
The sum of all percentages (in a circle graph or anywhere else) is 100%, which by definition is the totality of whatever it is that you are discussing.
0.45 in percentage = 45% 0.45 * 100% = 45%
The base or base number when dealing with percentages is the number on which the calculations are based. EXAMPLE : What is 12% of 87? Then 87 is the base number. Express 42 as a percentage of 59. Then 59 is the base number.
Base angles are equal and so that's 2 pairs of equal angles
James Watson and Francis Crick are credited with the base pairing rules and DNA structure in general. Erwin Chargaff is credited with the rules of base pairs in that the number of pyrimidines is equal to the number of purines.
There are equal parts of guanine and cytosine, and adenine and thymine, because they form base pairs in the DNA molecule. This is in accordance with the base-pairing rule, which states that in DNA, adenine always pairs with thymine, and guanine always pairs with cytosine.
A-T base pairs have 2 hydrogen bonds and G-C base pairs have 3 hydrogen bonds. Therefore, A-T base pairs are weaker than G-C base pairs.
DNA base pairs.
Watson and Crick came up with the base-pairing rule for nucleic acids using Chargaff's rule that in DNA the percentages of adenine and thymine are equal, and the percentages of guanine and cytosine are equal. Refer to the related link below.
50 base pairs
Percentage = Base x Rate
1/7 is equal to 14.2857%.
2.5 = 250%
Uracil is the base in RNA that pairs with adenine.
four base pairs