Vectors are used to denote or model directions.
In biotechnology, vectors can include plasmids, bacteriophages, and viral vectors. These vectors are used to transfer genetic material into host cells for various applications such as gene cloning, gene therapy, and protein production. Plasmids are commonly used in recombinant DNA technology, while viral vectors are often used in gene therapy.
how artificial chromosome are used as cloning vectors with example?
in maths
The law is used to add vectors to find the resultant of two or more vectors acting at a point.
The term collinear is used to describe vectors which are scalar multiples of one another (they are parallel; can have different magnitudes in the same or opposite direction). The term coplanar is used to describe vectors in at least 3-space. Coplanar vectors are three or more vectors that lie in the same plane (any 2-D flat surface).
Nucleic acid molecules used to deliver new genes to cells are called vectors. These vectors can be viruses (viral vectors) or artificially constructed pieces of DNA or RNA (non-viral vectors), and are essential for gene therapy research and applications.
Cloning vectors are used to increase the number of copies of the cloned gene or to amplify a foreign gene. Expression vectors are used to increase the expression of the foreign gene product.
They are used in airplanes and in sailboats.
Two vectors are identical when all their components are identical. An alternative definition, for vectors used in physics, is that they are identical when both the magnitude and the direction are identical.
In signals eigen values and eigen vectors are used in finding directions.... Signals are based on eigen vectors
There are no vectors used in playing billiards or pool. The use of vectors oversimplifies the action of the balls in play and simply does not apply to the game. The physics of cue ball action relies more on rotational momentum than simple vectors, and ball to rail interaction is a complex mathematical problem that cannot be determined by simple vectors.