A fluid is anything that flows, whether liquid or gas. This means that oxygen is a fluid as long as it isn't solid.
Note. Oxygen has to be cooled to 900K even to liquify. It solidifies at 500K (at normal atmospheric pressure).
Capillaries allow Glucose and oxygen to move out of the blood in the capillaries into interstitial fluid and into the cells. Fluid is exchanged between capillary blood and interstitial fluid.
Scientists explain that synovial fluid present in your joints acts as a lubricant. The fluid contains the gases oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. When you pop or crack a joint, you stretch the joint capsule. Gas is rapidly released, which forms bubbles. In order to crack the same knuckle again, you have to wait until the gases return to the synovial fluid.
As the speed of a fluid increases, the pressure within the fluid decreases.
they are different isotopes of oxygen, oxygen-17 has one more neutron than oxygen-16 making it slightly heavier. Oxygen-17 will react slightly slower than oxygen-16 since it has more mass.
ratio between oxygen usage to oxygen uptake is called as Oxygen extraction ratio
Amniotic fluid
Oxygen is a diatomic and is O2 if found in nature. It is a gas.
OXYGEN.
Diffusion from the intracellular fluid.
Cerebral spinal fluid
Blood.
Diffusion
Diffusion from the intracellular fluid.
water and oxygen
Oxygen deprivation may be determined by checking the amniotic fluid for meconium (feces)
Surrounding synovial fluid
blood