Red blood cells carry air throughout your body.
Gases are carried around the body by the circulatory system. Oxygen is transported in the blood by binding to hemoglobin in red blood cells, while carbon dioxide is carried back to the lungs to be exhaled. The cardiovascular system ensures that gases are delivered to tissues and organs where they are needed.
The lungs allow our blood to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide and other gases. When we exhale, those gases are pushed out of our body.
The three gases that pass through the stoma are carbon dioxide (CO2), oxygen (O2), and water vapor (H2O). Carbon dioxide enters the plant through the stoma for photosynthesis, while oxygen and water vapor exit as byproducts.
Simple Diffusion
Plants. By allowing gases to enter and exit through stomata, plants can exchange gases needed for respiration, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, with the external environment. This adaptation helps plants survive by facilitating the exchange of gases required for cellular respiration and photosynthesis.
Red blood cells are specially designed to carry gases through the body, primarily oxygen and carbon dioxide. They contain hemoglobin, a protein that binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it in tissues, while also carrying carbon dioxide back to the lungs for exhalation.
Heat lamination. This process is dangerous primarily because of the noxious gases emitted. Unless you are a professional working with specially designed equipment stick with the glue.
i dont know and i dont care lol... lungs
Yes, gases and liquids can carry heat by conduction, although they are generally considered to be poor conductors compared to solids. In gases and liquids, heat is transferred through collisions between molecules and the flow of energy from higher temperature regions to lower temperature regions.
exchange of gases respiration and photosynthesis takes place through stem of the plant, the stem is green enough to carry the property of leaves, as in normal plants.. while exchange of gases in huge tree trunks takes place through lenticels, which are present in barks of the trunks... exchange of gases-respiration and photosynthesis- takes place through stem of the plant, the stem is green enough to carry the property of leaves, as in normal plants.. while exchange of gases in huge tree trunks takes place through lenticels, which are present in barks of the trunks...
you tell me
That depends on what you want to remove it from. Usually it must be removed from exhaust gases and that is done by a scrubber. The gases pass up through a pile of specially shaped material called "media" and water flows down through the pile. The SO2 is absorbed into the water, which is then processed separately. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrubber
Arteries usually carry gasses such as oxygen throughout the blood. The gasses are then diffused through capillary beds to be used as nutrients by tissues in the body.
Yes
the leaf takes in gases through stomata (little holes). Also the leaves carry out photosynthesis and absorb sunlight, i think through chlorophyll
It moves mainly by radiating through gases.
Red blood cells really have only one job - transport gases through the blood. They carry oxygen from the lungs to the tissues, and they carry carbon dioxide from the tissues to the lungs.