the air then flows into the primary bronchi.
It travels down the trachea to your lungs.
nothing carries it, it travels down your trachea or wind pipe
After entering your nose and mouth, air travels down your windpipe (trachea) and into your lungs.
The tube through which oxygen travels down to the lungs is called the trachea. It is also known as the windpipe and is a crucial part of the respiratory system.
The passageway for food that is behind the trachea is the esophagus. After swallowing, food travels down the esophagus to reach the stomach for digestion, while air goes down the trachea to enter the lungs for respiration.
....the air? As you breathe in, you breathe in oxygen, and it travels down your trachea, where it branches off into your left and right bronchus, and then goes into your bronchials.
air
there is still air in the trachea. when you push down on the trachea, the air moves from the trachea and into the lungs, thus inflating it. the lings should appear to move up. be a truth seeker
Trachea, primary bronchi, secondary bronchi, tertiary bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli!
From the nose, air passes through the nasal cavity, where it is warmed, moistened, and filtered. It then travels down the pharynx (throat) into the trachea (windpipe) and finally enters the lungs through the bronchial tubes.
No, the trachea is the airway between the mouth and the lungs. It is not an organ, just a passage by which air travels to the lungs. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trachea
trachea help to connect mouth to the lungs for air passing down.