The Greek letter Phi is used to represent the Golden ratio. Some scientists believe that the Golden ratio plays a part in the perception of human beauty, so if one is considering cosmetic surgery, one may want to take the Golden ratio into account.
Plutonium is not used in the human body.
The human body doesn't contain rutherfordium.
The human body hasn't - fortunately - nobelium inside.
To study the human body we use touch, tensioned
Yes. The human body uses potassium to:Build proteinsBreak down and use carbohydratesBuild muscleMaintain normal body growthControl the electrical activity of the heartControl the acid-base balance
The human body doesn't use einsteinium.
Plutonium is not used in the human body.
The main use for the golden ratio is its aesthetic appeal - in art and architecture. Rectangles with the golden ratio as their aspect appeal to the human mind (for some reason). So various aspects of the Parthenon in Athens, for example, have dimensions whose ratio is phi. Phi is closely related to the Fibonacci sequence: the ratio of successive terms of the sequence approaches phi and so, just like the Fibonacci sequence, phi appears in many natural situations. However, there is no particular application based on phi.
The human body doesn't contain rutherfordium.
The human body hasn't - fortunately - nobelium inside.
Depends on the body's ability to use Grammar effectively.
To study the human body we use touch, tensioned
where does osmosis occur in the human body?
Flesh, figure, and anatomical frame can substitute for human body. If you are talking about a dead human body, you can use the word corpse.
For energy
stamina
yes