Osmosis is when water moves through a membrane from where it’s more to where it’s less.
Imagine you have two cups connected by a straw, one full of juice and the other empty. The straw acts like a membrane, letting only water pass through, not the juice. Over time, the water from the empty cup will move into the juice cup until both sides are balanced. That’s what happens in osmosis, water moves to balance things out.
How it works in real life
Think about your skin when you go swimming. If you stay in the pool for a long time, your skin might get wrinkly. That’s because water is moving into your skin through the membrane of your cells, making them swell up, just like how the empty cup fills up with water.
Why it matters
Examples
- A grape in salt water shrinks because the water moves out of the grape.
- When you put a potato in fresh water, it swells up as water moves into it.
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See also
- How Does Questions for Osmosis: Harmonized Water Work?
- What are mesenchymal cells?
- What are growth factors?
- What are neurons with cell bodies?
- What are mitochondrial disorders?