Back to Topic 3.5 — Neural signalling
3.5.3Biology SL14 flashcards

Action potentials & nerve impulses

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Card 1 of 143.5.3
3.5.3
Question

What is the resting potential of a neuron?

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All 14 Flashcards — Action potentials & nerve impulses

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Card 1concept

Question

What is the resting potential of a neuron?

Answer

About **−70 mV**, with the inside of the axon **negative** compared with the outside.

Card 2definition

Question

Define an action potential.

Answer

A rapid, temporary **reversal of the membrane potential** (from about −70 mV up to +40 mV and back) that travels along the axon as a nerve impulse.

Card 3concept

Question

What happens during depolarisation?

Answer

Voltage-gated **Na⁺ channels open** and **Na⁺ ions rush IN**, so the inside becomes positive and the membrane potential rises to about +40 mV.

Card 4concept

Question

What happens during repolarisation?

Answer

**K⁺ channels open** and **K⁺ ions move OUT**, so the inside becomes negative again and the membrane potential falls back towards −70 mV.

Card 5concept

Question

Which ion drives depolarisation, and in which direction?

Answer

**Sodium (Na⁺)**, moving **INTO** the axon.

Card 6concept

Question

Which ion drives repolarisation, and in which direction?

Answer

**Potassium (K⁺)**, moving **OUT of** the axon.

Card 7definition

Question

What is the threshold?

Answer

The membrane potential a stimulus must reach to trigger an action potential. Below it nothing fires; at or above it a full action potential fires.

Card 8concept

Question

What does the all-or-none principle mean?

Answer

An action potential fires **fully or not at all** — every one is the **same size**, regardless of how strong the stimulus is.

Card 9concept

Question

How does a stronger stimulus affect the response of a neuron?

Answer

It makes the neuron fire action potentials **more frequently** — it does **not** make each action potential bigger.

Card 10concept

Question

How does an action potential travel along an axon?

Answer

Each region **depolarises the next region**, regenerating the impulse so it stays the **same size** all the way along.

Card 11concept

Question

Why does a nerve impulse travel in only one direction?

Answer

The region just behind the impulse is briefly **recovering (refractory)** and cannot fire again straight away, so the impulse moves forward only.

Card 12concept

Question

On an action-potential trace, what does the rising part show?

Answer

**Depolarisation** — Na⁺ ions entering the axon (membrane potential rising towards +40 mV).

Card 13concept

Question

On an action-potential trace, what does the falling part show?

Answer

**Repolarisation** — K⁺ ions leaving the axon (membrane potential falling towards −70 mV).

Card 14concept

Question

What restores the resting potential after an action potential?

Answer

The **Na⁺/K⁺ pump**, which pumps Na⁺ out and K⁺ in to re-establish the resting ion balance.

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