The lungs are located anterior to the diaphragm. The diaphragm is the means by which the lungs inflate and deflate.
The diaphragm goes down, pulling air into the lungs. Your ribs expand, helping your lungs to expand also.
to make floor for lungs and to separate lungs from lower abdomen parts
Several organs are used for respiration. These organs include the lungs, heart, diaphragm, rib cage, trachea, arteries and veins, and the nose and mouth.
A horse's heart is in the same location as a human's. It is between the pair of lungs and ribs, and above the diaphragm. Most mammals have the same or similar organ positioning as the average human.
Through their nose and mouth using their lungs and diaphragm.
The location of the heart is in the mediastinum !!between the lungs & above the diaphragm
the lungs are above the diaphragm.
Your diaphragm contracts and expands when you breath. When the diaphragm contracts, air rushes into the lungs. When the diaphragm relaxes, air is exhaled.
I think you meant move air into the lungs. The muscle is the diaphragm.
I believe that answer is the diaphragm. As the diaphragm moves up and down, it expands the lungs, and when the diaphragm goes up, the lungs release the air out again.
The importance of diaphragm is that it helps the functionality of the lungs. The diaphragm will contract and expand so as it regulate the air pressure in the lungs.
Diaphragm
The diaphragm is a thin band of muscle under the lungs. When it contracts, the lungs are pulled up and out, reducing the air pressure and causing oxygen to be drawn in. When the diaphragm relaxes, the carbon dioxide is pushed out of the lungs.
Yes the liver lies below the diaphragm on the right side of the abdomen.
Lungs do not actively expand and contract by themselves. A muscle below the lungs called the diaphragm acts as a bellow, creating negative pressure within the abdominal cavity that holds the lungs to allow air to rush in and out the lungs.
The diaphragm moves down to make the lungs expand (inhalation)
Lungs do not contain muscle tissue. air enters your lungs when the muscular diaphragm contracts, pulling your ribs up and out. The diaphragm relaxes when you exhale.