agarose
0 sources
agarose
Summary
agarose is a homopolymer[1]. agarose draws 127 Wikipedia views per month (homopolymer category, ranking #2 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- agarose's image is recorded as Agarose powder.jpg[3].
- agarose's instance of is recorded as homopolymer[4].
- agarose's instance of is recorded as polysaccharide[5].
- agarose's chemical structure is recorded as Agarose polymere.svg[6].
- agarose's GND ID is recorded as 4217413-2[7].
- agarose's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 9012-36-6[8].
- agarose's EC number is recorded as 232-731-8[9].
- agarose's chemical formula is recorded as C₁₂H₁₈O₉[10].
- agarose's part of is recorded as agarose gel[11].
- agarose's Commons category is recorded as Agarose[12].
- agarose's has part is recorded as oxygen[13].
- agarose's has part is recorded as carbon[14].
- agarose's has part is recorded as hydrogen[15].
- agarose's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0w1fy68[16].
- agarose's KEGG ID is recorded as C01399[17].
- agarose's ChEBI ID is recorded as 2511[18].
- agarose's ECHA Substance Infocard ID is recorded as 100.029.743[19].
- agarose's CosIng number is recorded as 74293[20].
- agarose's DSSTox substance ID is recorded as DTXSID401009849[21].
- agarose's Elhuyar ZTH ID is recorded as 131953[22].
- agarose's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2778476535[23].
- agarose's CAB ID is recorded as 13219[24].
- agarose's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2778476535[25].
- agarose's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as agricultural-and-biological-sciences/agarose[26].
Why It Matters
agarose draws 127 Wikipedia views per month (homopolymer category, ranking #2 of 4).[2] agarose has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] agarose is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]