enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Affinity laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_laws

    The affinity laws are useful as they allow the prediction of the head discharge characteristic of a pump or fan from a known characteristic measured at a different speed or impeller diameter. The only requirement is that the two pumps or fans are dynamically similar, that is, the ratios of the fluid forced are the same.

  3. Sodium–potassium pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium–potassium_pump

    For every ATP molecule that the pump uses, three sodium ions are exported and two potassium ions are imported. [1] Thus, there is a net export of a single positive charge per pump cycle. The net effect is an extracellular concentration of sodium ions which is 5 times the intracellular concentration, and an intracellular concentration of ...

  4. Euler's pump and turbine equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler's_pump_and_turbine...

    With the help of these equations the head developed by a pump and the head utilised by a turbine can be easily determined. As the name suggests these equations were formulated by Leonhard Euler in the eighteenth century. [1] These equations can be derived from the moment of momentum equation when applied for a pump or a turbine.

  5. Proton pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton_pump

    The cytochrome b 6 f complex (EC 1.10.99.1) (also called plastoquinol—plastocyanin reductase) is an enzyme related to Complex III but found in the thylakoid membrane in chloroplasts of plants, cyanobacteria, and green algae. This proton pump is driven by electron transport and catalyzes the transfer of electrons from plastoquinol to plastocyanin.

  6. Biological pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_pump

    The biological pump is not so much the result of a single process, but rather the sum of a number of processes each of which can influence biological pumping. Overall, the pump transfers about 10.2 gigatonnes of carbon every year into the ocean's interior and a total of 1300 gigatonnes carbon over an average 127 years. [3]

  7. Molecular motor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_motor

    In general terms, a motor is a device that consumes energy in one form and converts it into motion or mechanical work; for example, many protein-based molecular motors harness the chemical free energy released by the hydrolysis of ATP in order to perform mechanical work. [1]

  8. Hydrogen potassium ATPase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_potassium_ATPase

    The gastric hydrogen potassium ATPase or H + /K + ATPase is the proton pump of the stomach.It exchanges potassium from the intestinal lumen with cytoplasmic hydronium [2] and is the enzyme primarily responsible for the acidification of the stomach contents and the activation of the digestive enzyme pepsin [3] (see gastric acid).

  9. Calcium pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_pump

    These pumps are needed to provide the steep electrochemical gradient that allows Ca 2+ to rush into the cytosol when a stimulus signal opens the Ca 2+ channels in the membrane. The pumps are also necessary to actively pump the Ca 2+ back out of the cytoplasm and return the cell to its pre-signal state. [3]