No; it is colorless.
Carbon dioxide is a colorless gas.
red blood cells take away carbon dioxide from the oxygen
Carbon monoxide bonds with the hemoglobin in red bloods cells and renders them useless. Carbon dioxide does not do this.
your red blood cells carry oxygen into your body and takes carbon dioxide out
Red blood cells carry carbon dioxide away from tissues to the lungs for exhalation.
Oxygenated blood is red. The presence of carbon dioxide in the blood does not alter the color.
Lungs
When hemoglobin carries carbon dioxide, it forms carbaminohemoglobin. This occurs in the red blood cells as carbon dioxide is transported from the tissues to the lungs to be exhaled.
The oxygen in it is replaced with carbon dioxide.
No. The red blood cells get oxygen at the lungs, not drop off carbon dioxide.
The majority of carbon dioxide is transported in red blood cells as bicarbonate ions (HCO3-) dissolved in the plasma. Carbon dioxide diffuses into red blood cells where it is converted to bicarbonate by the enzyme carbonic anhydrase. This allows for efficient transport of carbon dioxide from the tissues to the lungs for elimination.
Oxygen, carbon dioxide