it's always per minute.
Pulse and pendulum According to his first biographer Viviani, Galileo experimented with synchronizing two clocks -- the human pulse, and a pendulum -- in his student days at Pisa. The resulting invention, the "pulsilogium", represented the pulse rate as the length of the pendulum. Try making a pulsilogium: adjust the length of a pendulum so that its rate of swinging agrees with your own pulse. Mark the length. Then adjust the same pendulum for your lab partner's pulse -- is there a detectable difference in pulse rate? 2. Pendulum length and frequency It would be good to know what pendulum length means as a frequency (or pulse rate). http://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/mpeterso/galileo/time2.htm
The apical pulse is preferred for determining heart rate in infants and young children. This method is more accurate in these age groups due to their smaller and more variable peripheral pulses. Additionally, the apical pulse allows for better assessment of heart rhythm and can help identify any potential abnormalities.
Why do you have your pulse rate taken? Why do you have your pulse rate taken?
The breathing rate and pulse rate are related proportionally. If the breathing rate increases, so does the pulse rate. The pulse rate is an indication of the breathing rate.
the pulse rate is usually equal to the heart rate
Your pulse rate is faster
normal pulse rate of the carabao
pulse rate in legs
A distal pulse should be the same rate as a femoral pulse, carotid pulse, brachial pulse, pedal pulse, or radial pulse. The strength of the pulse may be harder to feel the further away from the heart, but the rate should be the same. One heart, One Pulse Rate. The Normal heart rate/pulse in an adult is 60-100 beats per minute. Less of course, in the super healthy athlete.
Our pulse rate increases with the increasement in the motion of the body.as a result, when we are fixed at a place, our pulse rate is minimumand inversely when we are in motion our pulse is fast
Our pulse rate increases with the increasement in the motion of the body.as a result, when we are fixed at a place, our pulse rate is minimumand inversely when we are in motion our pulse is fast
The respiration rate is your breathing rate and your pulse rate is your heart beat.