potential
Physics
Business
Examples of potential in the following topics:
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Standard Reduction Potentials
- Reduction potential (also known as redox potential, oxidation/reduction potential, or Eh) measures the tendency of a chemical species to acquire electrons and thereby be reduced.
- Reduction potential is measured in volts (V) or millivolts (mV).
- Each species has its own intrinsic reduction potential.
- Historically, many countries, including the United States and Canada, used standard oxidation potentials rather than reduction potentials in their calculations.
- However, because these can also be referred to as "redox potentials," the terms "reduction potentials" and "oxidation potentials" are preferred by the IUPAC.
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Postsynaptic Potentials and Their Integration at the Synapse
- Postsynaptic potentials are excitatory or inhibitory changes in the graded membrane potential in the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse.
- Postsynaptic potentials are changes in the membrane potential of the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse.
- Postsynaptic potentials are graded potentials and should not be confused with action potentials, although their function is to initiate or inhibit action potentials.
- This is an excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) as it brings the neuron's potential closer to its firing threshold (about -50mV).
- This is an inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP).
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The Action Potential and Propagation
- Action potential is a brief reversal of membrane potential where the membrane potential changes from -70mV to +30mV.
- When the membrane potential of the axon hillock of a neuron reaches threshold, a rapid change in membrane potential occurs in the form of an action potential.
- This moving change in membrane potential has three phases.
- Schematic and B. actual action potential recordings.
- The action potential is a clear example of how changes in membrane potential can act as a signal.
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Water and Solute Potential
- Water potential is the measure of potential energy in water and drives the movement of water through plants.
- Water potential is a measure of the potential energy in water, or the difference in potential energy between a given water sample and pure water (at atmospheric pressure and ambient temperature).
- Solute potential (Ψs), also called osmotic potential, is negative in a plant cell and zero in distilled water.
- Solutes reduce water potential (resulting in a negative Ψw) by consuming some of the potential energy available in the water.
- This is why solute potential is sometimes called osmotic potential.
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Nerve Impulse Transmission within a Neuron: Action Potential
- The action potential travels down the neuron as Na+ channels open.
- Action potentials are considered an "all-or nothing" event.
- Once the threshold potential is reached, the neuron completely depolarizes.
- The diffusion of K+ out of the cell hyperpolarizes the cell, making the membrane potential more negative than the cell's normal resting potential.
- At this point, the sodium channels return to their resting state, ready to open again if the membrane potential again exceeds the threshold potential.
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Membrane Potentials as Signals
- In neurons, a sufficiently large depolarization can evoke an action potential in which the membrane potential changes rapidly.
- Membrane potential (also transmembrane potential or membrane voltage) is the difference in electrical potential between the interior and the exterior of a biological cell.
- The membrane potential has two basic functions.
- Schematic and B. actual action potential recordings.
- The action potential is a clear example of how changes in membrane potential can act as a signal.
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Gravity
- The potential energy due to elevated positions is called gravitational potential energy, evidenced, for example, by water held in an elevated reservoir or behind a dam (as an example, shows Hoover Dam).
- (The surface will be the zero point of the potential energy. ) We can express the potential energy (gravitational potential energy) as:
- For this choice, the potential at infinity is defined as 0.
- Hoover dam uses the stored gravitational potential energy to generate electricity.
- Generate an equation that can be used to express the gravitational potential energy near the earth
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Potential Energy Curves and Equipotentials
- A potential energy curve plots potential energy as a function of position; equipotential lines trace lines of equal potential energy.
- A potential energy curve plots the potential energy of an object as a function of that object's position.
- The utility of a potential energy curve is that we can quickly determine the potential energy of the object in question at a given position.
- Equipotential lines trace lines of equal potential energy.
- Work (W) is a measure of the change in potential energy (ΔPE): W = -ΔPE.
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Resting Membrane Potentials
- The potential difference in a resting neuron is called the resting membrane potential.
- The potential difference in a resting neuron is called the resting membrane potential.
- The resting membrane potential exists only across the membrane.
- The Goldman formula essentially expresses the membrane potential as an average of the reversal potentials for the individual ion types, weighted by permeability.
- Consequently, the resting potential is usually close to the potassium reversal potential.
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Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge
- The electric potential of a point charge Q is given by $V=\frac{kQ}{r}$.
- Recall that the electric potential is defined as the electric potential energy per unit charge
- The electric potential tells you how much potential energy a single point charge at a given location will have.
- The potential at infinity is chosen to be zero.
- Earth's potential is taken to be zero as a reference.