I suggest that you look into peak flow and try your own, if not .... Peak flow is where you breathe into a device specially designed to measure the amount of air your lungs and how much it can obtain as everybody has a different maximum level of air (oxygen) they can get in your lungs.
There really isn't a technical name for lung capacity.
Take a deep breath, and blow into a balloon, until you feel that your lungs have totally expelled the air. The balloon size would probably give you an idea of the amount of air lungs can hold
It varies by person. Genetics, age, gender and hereditary genes all play a role in your lung size.
6 L
Also known as Total Lung Capacity- the maximum amount of air your lungs can hold if you forcefully inhale.
the air in the atmoshere in your region.
Lung capacity or lung volume is the amount of air a person's lungs can hold. The average human's lungs hold 6 liters of air. Lung volume can change depending on one's altitude, age, gender, height, and activities (including sports, singing, playing woodwind instruments, etc.) among others.
This is an odd word-- I didn't find it in my dictionary. That doesn't mean it isn't a word. As a noun it would the maximum amount of air one would have in the lungs during an ordinary breath. Or, I suppose it could mean the amount of air you would inhale and hold if asked to hold your breath.
your mom 80% hahaahha
A spirometer measures the amount of air in lungs
Relative humidity.
relative humidity
any amount ranging from none to as much as your lungs can hold.
relative humidity
The vital capacity is the maximum amount of air that a person can expel from the lungs.
It is the maximum humidity, expressed as the saturation point for a given temperature.