Biology, asked by sharmin1098765, 1 year ago

Unlike cytoplasm, nucleoplasm is not colloidal. Rather the nucleoplasm is amorphous in nature.-------- What is amorphous?? Pls explain.

Answers

Answered by simranprakash
0
an amorphous (from the Greek a, without, morphé, shape, form) or non-crystalline solid is a solid that lacks the long-range order that is characteristic of a crystal. In some older books, the term has been used synonymously with glass.

Amorphous materials have an internal structure made of interconnected structural blocks. These blocks can be similar to the basic structural units found in the corresponding crystalline phase of the same compound. Whether a material is liquid or solid depends primarily on the connectivity between its elementary building blocks so that solids are characterized by a high degree of connectivity whereas structural blocks in fluids have lower connectivity.

simranprakash: I thik this is useful
simranprakash: for you
Answered by srinandan69
0
Protoplasm :- the cytoplasm and nucleas is together called Protoplasm

Cytoplasm :- it is jelly like material, where all the cell organelles are present.

Nucleoplasm :- it is thick dense fluid present in nucleus
Hope it helps u...........
Similar questions