nitrogen
Carbon dioxide is a compound of Carbon and Oxygen - CO2
No, when oxygen burns, it combines with other elements to form oxides, not carbon dioxide. For example, when oxygen burns hydrocarbons, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
No, carbon dioxide is not the same as oxygen (O2). Carbon dioxide is a molecule composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms (CO2). Oxygen, on the other hand, exists as O2, where two oxygen atoms are bonded together.
Carbon dioxide does not create oxygen. Rather, plants and other photosynthetic organisms use carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight to produce oxygen during the process of photosynthesis. In this chemical reaction, carbon dioxide is converted into carbohydrates, releasing oxygen as a byproduct.
The pulmonary veins are high in oxygen and low in carbon dioxide. All other veins are high in carbon dioxide and low in oxygen.
carbon dioxide
It is a cycle on how carbon dioxide is transformed into oxygen for animals and humans and other living things to breathe.
The "kind" called Carbon Monoxide. In other words, you don't get Carbon Dioxide. (You need two atoms of Oxygen to get Carbon Dioxide, hence the "di" part.)
During the process of photosynthesis release oxygen and animals (we) inhale oxygen and release carbondioxide. This is how plants and animals depend on each other by symbiosys. Hope that helps...
No, it is the other way round, people breath in Oxygen (O2) and breath out Carbon Dioxide (CO2).
oxygen (amongst other gases like nitrogen and carbon dioxide)
The carbon oxygen cycle describes the interplay between carbon dioxide and oxygen in Earth's atmosphere, with plants absorbing carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and releasing oxygen, while animals and other organisms consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide through respiration.