Monocular cues use tension of the muscle attached to the lens to tell how close an object is if less than four feet away.
The heart is a organ-muscle that is about the same size of your fist.
Conduct
One with a half-life close to the age of the object
Yes, the ciliary muscle is relaxed for distant vision, but is contracted for close vision.
It should have a half life that is close to the age of the object being dated
No, "close the door" is a verb phrase, with "close" as the main verb and "the door" as the object of the verb. In this case, "the door" is the direct object of the verb.
The heart is a organ-muscle that is about the same size of your fist.
Every single object in space exerts a force on every single other object. They don't even have to be close.
[object Object]
Nothing.
sphincter
masseter
The adductor Muscle
induction
The weight of an object depends on the mass of the object and the mass of the planet. How close the Sun is doesn't really factor into things.
the orbicularis oris muscle
to close your eyes, you use the muscle optomwaener prognatis and to blink it is the same one as well as the caucenboul ligament hope this helps!