It is usually warmer, but not always. The temperature of the interior of your body is about 98-99 degrees Fahrenheit. So when you breathe in air that's cooler than that, the air is warmed by your lungs, and so it's warmer when it comes out. However, if the air you're breathing in is hotter than your body temperature, like say 105 degrees in the desert, the air will actually be cooled by your lungs, and will come out cooler than when it went in.
ets sucked into the body which warms it up
This is not always the case. The air you breath in is the temperature outside your body. The air you breath out is close to the temperature inside your body.
Because your body warms the air as you breathe in - the air retains heat as you exhale.
the difference between inhale and exhale is when you inhale you get more oxygenthan you exhale
No. When you exhale, you increase the pressure in your chest cavity to push out some of the air in your lungs.
the temperature of your breathe when you exhale can be estimated to be about 74F
Because the cold air around you cannot hold as much water as warm air in your breath, the moisture in your breath condenses when it hits the cold air and forms into a little cloud.
Koalas are mammals and, like all mammals, they exhale air.
when you inhale and exhale the air get into the stomach
We exhale more oxygen than we use. Air contains approximately 20% Oxygen - when we breathe in - we absorb about 4% of the oxygen - and exhale the rest.
When you exhale the diaghphram moves up and in and this proccess squeezes the air out of the lungs
to breathe out air
corbondioxide
You exhale air.