Yes it does. The nose is designed with conchae or turbinates that provide a pathway, meatus, that causes the air to touch the walls as it passes through. The nasal cavity is highly vascular, hence nose bleeds, that warm the air as it passes by.
The nasal cavities.
The nose is the first cleaned and moistened warm part of the respiratory system. The nose acts as a filter for air to get to the lower respiratory system.
It is carried in air droplets so enters through the airway and then into the lungs where it thrives on warm, damp environment.
To warm the air entering the body To ward off respiratory infections But mainly to extract oxygen and mount them on red blood cells so that heart can pump oxygenated blood to all the cells of the body, and to blow off excess carbon dioxide
they go warm because the heating might be on or because you are in a warm house. it has nothing to do with your body system.
warm the air before it enters the body. filter particles before they enter the lungs. an alternative breathing source.
True Mucus helps moisten warm and filter the air as it enters the nose.
They could die, depending on the type of microbe and the method it enters the body. But generally speaking, microorganisms thrive inside the human body. It is a warm, wet, and nutrient rich environment.
Oxygen is used by the cells for aerobic respiration -- the oxidation of carbohydrates to provide energy for the cells. The process provides the energy to move muscles, and to build tissues, and to keep the body warm.
Mucus traps foreign particles as it enters the conducting parts of the respiratory system. Cilia are microstructures lining the epithelial layer of those conducting parts that act to sweep up the mucus-bound foreign particles that otherwise would enter the lungs.
The structures of the respiratory system that prepare air for entry into the lungs include the nose and nasal cavity, which filter, warm, and humidify the air. The mucus lining the respiratory tract helps trap particles and pathogens, while the cilia in the airways sweep the mucus and trapped particles out of the respiratory system.
nothing
The primary functions of the respiratory epithelium is to humidify, filter, and warm the incoming air during respiration.