The Left Ventricle has to send blood all through the body. This requires more force, therefore more muscle.
Tornadoes come down to the ground by a lowering wall cloud. It is basically a wall of dark clouds descending. If the conditions are right, it can tighten up to become a tornado.
Obviously 20 N of force, right? Since neither object goes anywhere.
Speed of Sound = 340.29 m / s It reaches the wall in 1 second so we are left with: 340.29 m
Probably because the hot water pipes are right behind the front wall of the tub.
The reaction is the wall pushing back on you.
The right ventricle just receive the blood and pump it into the lungs only, but the left ventricle pump the blood to all round the body, to do the ventricle wall is more thicker, that's why the left ventricle have thicker wall..... Hope I helped you!! (Ivy Yumi Y)
the right ventricle contains deoxegynated blood, but the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood out at a much more forceful rate (it has to get to the rest of you body). Therefore, the left ventricle wall is thicker. =]
The Left Ventricle has to send blood all through the body. This requires more force, therefore more muscle.
The thicker walls of the left ventricle allow for greater pumping force. This increased force is needed because blood in the systemic circuit must travel much farther than that in the pulmonary circuit.
The wall of the left ventricle is thicker because it pumps blood to the entire body. The right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs, so it does not have to be as strong as the left ventricle.The oxygenated blood that comes into the left ventricle has to be transported to all the parts of the body. For this reason, the left ventricle has thicker muscle walls that pump blood at a higher pressure than the right ventricle that pumps blood only to the lungs.
Thewall of the left ventricle is thicker than the wall of the right ventricle. This is because the left ventricle has to produce a larger force than the right ventricle. Blood from the right ventricle only has to go to the lungs, which are close to the heart. However blood from the left ventricle has to go all round the rest of the body, a much greater distance and so it meets more resistance from the blood vessels. For this reason the left ventricle has to generate a greater force to overcome the greater resistance, so it has more muscle, making its wall thicker. The volume of blood pumped out by each ventricle has to be the same.
The intraventricular septum separates the right ventricle from the left ventricle.
No. The wall of the left ventricle is much thicker. The left ventricle pumps blood through the systemic circuit, which travels though the entire body, excluding the lungs, returning to the right atrium. This requires overcoming the various resistance factors within the blood vessels including, but not limited to, distance traveled by the blood, gravity, and vessels with a narrow radius. To generate the necessary pressure, the muscle, or "wall" of the left ventricle, is much thicker, and therefore much stronger. The right ventricle pumps blood through the pulmonary circuit (to the lungs and back to the left atrium) which is much shorter and less complex, and therefore requires much less pressure and far less muscle.
the septum
The left side of the heart has a thicker ventricular wall. The left ventricle is responsible for pumping oxygenated blood into the aorta, thereby providing oxygen to all parts of the body. The right ventricle, in contrast, only has the responsibility of pumping de-oxygenated blood into the lungs for the exchange of gases, which requires less pressure than pushing blood through the entire body.
in my school my teacher asked us to do a project and my question is : WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A RIGHT VENTRICLE AND THE LEFT VENTRICLE ? The wall of the left ventricle is a lot thicker than the wall of the right ventricle. This is because a lot more pressure is required to pump blood from the heart to the farthest body tissues. The right pulmonary pump only needs to pump blood as far as the adjacent lungs.
The left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood round the body, whereas the right ventricle only needs to pump blood to the lungs. Therefore, the left ventricle needs to be more powerful and strong compared to the right, and this is why the ventricle walls differ in this way.