Question detail

Which option best interprets the albumen solution using ATP nucleotide, Benedict assay, 37 ?C bath and dataset lane 157 for Link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Biological molecules official content

Question

  1. A. The albumen solution using ATP nucleotide, Benedict assay, 37 ?C bath and dataset lane 157 links link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change to Water with molecule-specific evidence.
  2. B. It only names enzyme active site and ignores the evidence from buffered enzyme trial.
  3. C. It describes a different sample, bacterial plate, without answering the stated objective.
  4. D. It gives an unsupported conclusion from pH 5.8 and omits the biological explanation.

Answer

Correct answer: The albumen solution using ATP nucleotide, Benedict assay, 37 ?C bath and dataset lane 157 links link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change to Water with molecule-specific evidence.

Explanation

The albumen solution using ATP nucleotide, Benedict assay, 37 ?C bath and dataset lane 157 links link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change to Water with molecule-specific evidence. The distractors are wrong because they change the sample, ignore the assay evidence or make an unsupported conclusion. This anchors the answer to Water and the exact learning objective.

Common mistake

Water common mistake 1

Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change..

Answer by clearly explaining how to link high heat capacity to buffering temperature change..

Related flashcards

Flashcard 1 of 5

Press Space to flip, arrows to move

Related practice questions

Question 1 of 5

Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.

0 of 4 attempted