in the olfactory epithelium of the nasal cavity.
The cranial nerve used when smelling a flower is the olfactory nerve (cranial nerve I). It is responsible for your sense of smell.
Axons from the olfactory nerve project to the olfactory bulb in the brain. The olfactory bulb processes and relays information about smells to other areas of the brain, such as the olfactory cortex, where scent perception occurs.
Olfactory nerve to the brain's olfactory bulb, where they are processed and interpreted as specific smells. The olfactory nerve is responsible for carrying information about odors from the nose to the brain.
The olfactory nerve, responsible for the sense of smell, ends in the olfactory bulb located in the brain, specifically in the olfactory cortex. This is where the nerve impulses triggered by odors are processed and interpreted.
yeah, it is an olfactory indicator!
onion
yes!!!
Olfactory indicators are substances that change color in response to specific odors. They are used to detect or identify the presence of certain gases or vapors based on the color change they undergo when exposed to particular odors. These indicators can be useful in applications such as leak detection in gas pipelines or detection of spoiled food.
This indicator is known as an olfactory indicator. It changes its smell based on the pH of the medium it is in, which can be useful for detecting changes in acidity or alkalinity.
In this question, "allfactory" probably is someone's phonetic (mis)spelling of "olfactory", which refers to odor. An example of an olfactory indicator of chemical reaction would be disappearance of the usually pleasant odor of an ester by an odorless or sharper smelling mixture of an organic acid and an alcohol as the ester is being hydrolyzed.
Yes, the onion olfactory indicator changes smell in both acid and base solutions. In acidic solutions, the smell becomes sharper and more pungent, while in basic solutions, the smell becomes sweeter and less intense.
in the olfactory epithelium of the nasal cavity.
The cranial nerve used when smelling a flower is the olfactory nerve (cranial nerve I). It is responsible for your sense of smell.
Axons from the olfactory nerve project to the olfactory bulb in the brain. The olfactory bulb processes and relays information about smells to other areas of the brain, such as the olfactory cortex, where scent perception occurs.
Olfactory nerve to the brain's olfactory bulb, where they are processed and interpreted as specific smells. The olfactory nerve is responsible for carrying information about odors from the nose to the brain.
The mechanism of the olfactory system can be divided into a peripheral one, sensing an external stimulus and encoding it as an electric signal in neurons, and a central one, where all signals are integrated and processed in the central nervous system. The peripheral olfactory system receptors are connected to bipolar olfactory receptor neurons in the olfactory epithelium. Fot the central olfactory system, axons from the olfactory sensory neurons converge in the olfactory bulb.