less glycogen and more fat for energy
they rely less on fat breakdown and more on glucose oxidation for energy
to make you have more energy
That is correct.
water has the more energy. ice has less energy.
Calories are basically a measurement of energy. To make your muscles move, your body needs energy, and it gets that energy from the food you've eaten. The more muscles you use, and the longer you use those muscles, the more energy(=calories) you use up.
Muscles are metabolically very active.So they need lot of energy.
When you exercise you use your muscles and your muscles contain Glycogen which could be considered your "energy source". during exercise your muscles use glycogen depleting your energy levels making you feel tired.
Calories are basically a measurement of energy. To make your muscles move, your body needs energy, and it gets that energy from the food you've eaten. The more muscles you use, and the longer you use those muscles, the more energy(=calories) you use up.
False, while you need oxygen to release the energy in muscles (to move), once there is enough oxygen, adding more does not create more energy. The energy comes form the food you eat, not the oxygen used to burn it.
Muscle cells are very active relatively to the skin cell. So it has more mitochondria
muscles. The cells need to produce more energy
less