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Oxygen and carbon dioxide easily pass back and forth between the alveoli and the blood through the capillaries.
It uses something called the "greenhouse effect." Basically, "greenhouse gases," like carbon dioxide, are in the atmosphere. These gases trap and reflect the heat shining from the sun. They keep bouncing the sun's rays back and forth, which increases the temperature of the atmosphere.
Given off by animals as a waste product. Used by plants to maintain life. nova net Carbon dioxide (CO2) is considered a trace gas in the atmosphere because it is much less abundant than oxygen or nitrogen. However, this trace gas plays a vital role in sustaining life on Earth and in controlling the Earth's climate by trapping heat in the atmosphere. The oceans play an important role in regulating the amount of CO2in the atmosphere because CO2 can move quickly into and out of the oceans. Once in the oceans, the CO2 no longer traps heat. CO2 also moves quickly between the atmosphere and the land biosphere (material that is or was living on land). Of the three places where carbon is stored-atmosphere, oceans, and land biosphere-approximately 93 percent of the CO2 is found in the oceans. The atmosphere, at about 750 petagrams of carbon (a petagram [Pg] is 1*10^15 grams), has the smallest amount of carbon. Approximately 90 to 100 Pg of carbon moves back and forth between the atmosphere and the oceans, and between the atmosphere and the land biosphere. Although these exchange rates are large relative to the total amount of carbon stored in the atmosphere, the concentration of CO2 was constant at 280 parts per million (ppm) by volume for at least 1,000 years prior to the industrial era. Atmospheric concentrations of CO2 were constant because the carbon being removed from the atmosphere in some places exactly matched the CO2 being added to the atmosphere in other places. Marine plants and animals play a role in the uptake and release of carbon dioxide in the ocean. Plants, primarily phytoplankton but also macrophytes such as this seaweed, take up carbon dioxide and release oxygen, which oxygen-dependent animals need to survive.
The Antonine Wall is between Firth of Forth and Firth of Clyde.
We exhale carbon dioxide, which trees take in to produce oxygen, which we take in to produce carbon dioxide, and so forth.
yes of course gases such oxygen carbon dioxide methane carbon monoxide sulfur dioxide so and so forth ....
The primary gases volcanoes belch forth more than any other (besides steam-water vapor) continues to be sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and carbon dioxide. To a lesser extent nitrogen, argon, helium, methane, carbon monoxide, and other more exotic molecules are also vented.
No, but researchers are studying a way to transfer code back and forth in the computer.
Fourth is like the number 4. Forth is to go forward.
it is called cycle because when we exhale we gives off carbon dioxide, and it is absorb by plants, then after the process called photosynthesis it gives off oxygen to the atmosphere, then now we inhale it and after we inhale we exhale the carbon dioxide and goes to the atmosphere then absorb by plants, gives off oxygen, goes to the atmosphere, then inhale it and so on and so forth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . for shorth will go back and go back. not like the one way flow of energy that will remain.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
No, "to and fro" and "back and forth" are synonymous phrases that mean moving in a continuous and alternating manner between two points. Both phrases describe the same back-and-forth motion.
The Forth Bridge spans over the Firth of Forth in Scotland. It carries rail traffic between Edinburgh at South Queensferry and Fife at North Queensferry.