The ratio of surface area of an organism or cell to its volume is an important biological measure. This is because most interactions between the organism and the rest of the world happen at the its surface. So a bigger surface allows the interaction to happen more easily and therefore, usually, faster.
The reactions could be chemical - taking oxygen into blood cells, transmitting it to muscle cells, collecting waste from cells, and so on. Or they could be physical - heat loss or gain.
Surface area to volume ratio is defined as the amount of surface area per unit volume of either a single object or a collection of objects. The calculation of this measurement is important in figuring out the rate at which a chemical reaction will proceed.
The surface-area-to-volume-ratio
C. Woodward has written: 'Protein Structural Biology in Biomedical Research, Volume 22B (1997) First Edition (Advances in Molecular and Cell Biology) (Advances in Molecular and Cell Biology)'
It decreases. As the dimensions increase by a number, the surface area increases by the same number to the power of 2, but the volume increases by the same number to the power of 3, meaning that the volume increases faster than the surface area.
biology
Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.Yes, it does fall under the area of biology.
Leon W. Browder has written: 'Developmental Biology: A Comprehensive Synthesis: Volume 2' 'Developmental Biology: A Comprehensive Synthesis: Volume 1'
Surface area to volume ratio is defined as the amount of surface area per unit volume of either a single object or a collection of objects. The calculation of this measurement is important in figuring out the rate at which a chemical reaction will proceed.
To obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
surface area/ volume. wider range of surface area to volume is better for cells.
The surface-area-to-volume ratio may be calculated as follows: -- Find the surface area of the shape. -- Find the volume of the shape. -- Divide the surface area by the volume. The quotient is the surface-area-to-volume ratio.
"Area" is an amount of flat surface. It has no volume. If the area is the bottom of a tank, then the volume of the substance in the tank is the area multiplied by the depth.
i believe its volume
Scott F. Gilbert has written: 'Developmental Biology' 'Developmental Biology, Eighth Edition (Developmental Biology)' 'Developmental Biology: A Comprehensive Synthesis: Volume 7' 'Ecological developmental biology' -- subject(s): Phenotypic plasticity, Evolution (Biology), Developmental biology, Epigenesis
to obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
By dividing the area into the volume: width = volume/area
Volume=area * length of that surface