Cold-blooded Animals:
E.g., lizards use environmental conditions to regulate body temperature.
Behaviorally seek shade to cool down without physiological mechanisms.
Opposite of Cold-blooded:
Warm-blooded animals maintain temperature through physiological processes like sweating.
Dynamic Equilibrium:
The body constantly adjusts to maintain a stable internal environment.
Negative Feedback Mechanism:
A primary method of maintaining homeostasis.
When out of range, a response occurs to return to the desired state (e.g., sweating reduces body temperature).
Once the desired temperature is reached, the response ceases (e.g. hypothalamus signals to stop sweating).
Negative Feedback:
Promotes stability by counteracting changes.
Essential for regulating temperature, blood sugar, etc.
Positive Feedback:
Accelerates a response to achieve a significant change (e.g., childbirth, blood clotting).
Continual increase until a specific outcome is achieved.
Example: Blood clotting involves platelets forming a larger clot until bleeding stops, which if unchecked, leads to excessive clotting.
Disease:
Acute lack of homeostasis can lead to disease, characterized by rapid onset and short duration.
Aging:
Chronic deviation from homeostasis leads to aging, including physical changes and declining function.
Death:
Failure to maintain homeostasis ultimately results in death.
Matter:
Defined as anything that occupies space and has mass.
Elements:
There are 92 naturally occurring elements, composed of atoms.
Subatomic Particles:
Protons: Positively charged.
Neutrons: No charge.
Electrons: Negatively charged.
Number of protons is equal to the number of electrons in a neutral atom.
Atomic Number:
Indicates the number of protons and thus the identity of the element.
Energy Levels:
Electrons are arranged in energy levels around the nucleus.
Octet Rule: Atoms tend to combine so that they have eight electrons in their outer shell (to achieve a stable configuration).
Elements will either share electrons, accept, or donate them to reach stability.
Ionic Bonds:
Formed when electrons are transferred from one atom to another (e.g., sodium and chloride form table salt).
Results in charged ions (cations and anions) that attract each other.
Covalent Bonds:
Formed through the sharing of electrons between atoms (e.g., water and methane).
Polar covalent bonds occur when electrons are not shared equally, creating molecules with slight charges (e.g., in water).
Hydrogen Bonds:
Form between a hydrogen atom of one molecule and electronegative atoms of another (e.g., oxygen).
Individually weak but collectively strong, contributing to unique properties of water.
Water as a Solvent:
Water's polar nature allows it to dissolve various substances, making it an essential component in biological systems.