Depends on the weight. Check the MythBusters website, they did an experiment on this.
The average human body contains around 37.2 trillion cells.
The average human body consists of approximately 100,000 billion cells.
Approximately 60% of the human body is composed of water, while the remaining 40% is made up of various tissues and substances, including flesh. Therefore, the percentage of flesh in the average human body is around 40%.
On average, it takes the human body about 2 to 5 hours to convert water into urine.
The human body is made up of about 60 water on average.
No, human body doesn't float on helium as it is light.
I'm personally not running out of helium. In fact helium is harmful to the human body in large doses. So no helium would not affect me.
Yes, helium can be found in trace amounts in the human body, primarily in the lungs and bloodstream. However, the concentration of helium in the body is very low and is not considered harmful to health.
Traces of helium might be found in the body under some circumstances, but as helium is an inert gas, it isn't found in any compounds in the body. Helium certainly isn't necessary for life. The presence of helium in the body may only occur when we breathe some helium and it is taken up in the blood and diffuses into tissues. Even then, the helium exists as single atoms of this noble gas, and it will diffuse out of the body given a chance to do so.
there are 22 needed in the human body.
The average human body contains around 37.2 trillion cells.
On average, a human generates about 100 watts of body heat.
The human body generates an average of about 100 watts of heat.
The human body produces an average of about 100 watts of heat.
The average human body consists of approximately 100,000 billion cells.
The average human weight is 70 kilograms.
On average, a human body gives off about 100 watts of heat.