I see, so the cell is not at equilibrium, so what state is it in? Does the Na
+/K
+ ATPase help maintain that state? Is it correct to say that the ATPase is constantly increasing the intracellular electronegativity? I think I found why I was misled into thinking the cell was at equilibrium thanks to Section 15.4 of Molecular Biology by Harvey Lodish et al. which explains that when a membrane separates solutions containing different concentrations of ions, and the membrane becomes permeable to one of the ions, then the ions will flow down their concentration gradient until the point where the electronegativity and concentration gradient balance and cancel each other out and maintain an equal flow of the ion back and forth.
However, my mistake was saying that the cell is at equilibrium, because the cell is not a simple selectively permeable membrane, but rather a system which requires the action potential provided by the resting potential of the electric difference between intracellular and extracellular ions for some (which, though?) of its biological processes.
The cell uses the Na
+/K
+ ATPase to maintain this action potential, "as it would fall if it were to be regulated only by ion channels" says the book.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK21627/However, now I would like to know why would the membrane voltage fall of it was not for the Sodium Potassium Pump? Also, is my little explanation more or less right? Thanks again!!!