As red blood cells travel through capillaries oxygen is released (disassociated) with hemoglobin. The oxygen then diffuses down it's concentration gradient into the tissues.
Pollen travels through the plants ovaries up to the stamen waiting for a bee to release pollen around.***
The process in muscles which uses oxygen is called respiration. Muscles, like all aerobic living cells, require oxygen for aerobic respiration, which is the process by which cells convert food into energy. So when muscles contract, they are using oxygen. When muscles do not get sufficient oxygen for contraction, problems arise. The muscle cells must use anaerobic repiration which is respiration without oxygen. They cannot do this for very long though as the byproduct of anaerobic respiration is lactic acid which causes a fall in pH.
Heat travels through water and air primarily through conduction and convection. Radiation is also a significant means of heat transfer through air, but less so through water.
Carbon Dioxide is a byproduct of cellular respiration. After your cells remove CO2 as a waste product, it travels back through the blood, into capillaries in the lungs. From there, the CO2 is removed through exhalation when you breathe. An important thing to note is that your exhaled breath is not 100% CO2. It is a mixture of room air and CO2.
Light slows down when it travels through matter.The only time light travels at is maximum speed, c, is in a vacuum.
Oxygen circulates through the body in blood. A molecule of oxygen (O2) from the lungs binds loosely to a molecule of hemoglobin in a red blood cell. The red blood cell travels through the capillaries and the oxygen molecule is released from the hemoglobin and is delivered to the cells.
Oxygen circulates through the body in blood. A molecule of oxygen (O2) from the lungs binds loosely to a molecule of hemoglobin in a red blood cell. The red blood cell travels through the capillaries and the oxygen molecule is released from the hemoglobin and is delivered to the cells.
hepatic portal vein.
The same hemoglobin molecules that absorb oxygen in the lungs release it to the cells in the capillaries and pick up carbon dioxide from the cells. When the blood returns to the lungs, the hemoglobin releases the carbon dioxide and replaces it with fresh oxygen. The carbon dioxide released by the hemoglobin travels across the membranes in the lungs and is breathe out when we exhale.
Can be veins, can be arteries, can be capillaries, can be the aorta..
Blood vessels - arteries, capillaries and veins.
Blood vessels are the tubes through which blood travels. They include veins, capillaries, and arteries.
In the alveoli
The alveoli of the lungs are surrounded by capillaries. As the blood travels through the capillaries, the red blood cells become oxygenated and give up their load of CO2
Unoxygenated blood travels to the heart though the veins to be pumped to your lung capillaries. At you lung capillaries the blood becomes oxygenated and then goes back to the heart to pump oxygenated blood to the rest of your body. the capillaries blood travels though you arteries.
Oxygen is inhaled through the mouth and nose, travels through the trachea and bronchi and into the lungs. From there it goes into the alveoli and diffuses through the capillaries. It attaches to haemoglobin in the blood.
The blood travels through the human body by way of the circulatory system. The circulatory system is made up of the heart, the lungs, and blood vessels (arteries, veins, and capillaries.)