Oxygen moves through your red blood cells.
Oxygen molecules move down a concentration gradient through simple diffusion. This means they move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached.
No, the chemical properties of oxygen remain the same when it is heated. Heating can cause oxygen molecules to move faster and spread apart, but the actual oxygen atoms remain unchanged.
Stomata.
Oxygen and carbon dioxide move in and out of a leaf through tiny openings called stomata. Stomata are located on the underside of the leaf and allow for gas exchange between the leaf and the surrounding atmosphere.
The process used to move oxygen into the capillaries of the lungs is called diffusion. Oxygen in the alveoli of the lungs moves across the thin walls of the alveoli and the capillaries by diffusion, from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration, facilitated by the pressure difference between the alveoli and the blood in the capillaries.
The circulatory system helps move oxygen throughout your body.
yes. because your body needs oxygen to move. and when you excersize you move more
Yes
artaries
OXYGEN
It uses there fin to move and there gills to breath in oxygen
by diffusion
They are the alveoli.
Ozone is O3 Oxygen is O2 The less massive molecule O2 will move faster if subjected to the same force.
Carbon dioxide move in whereas oxygen and water vapour move out.
Oxygen molecules move down a concentration gradient through simple diffusion. This means they move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached.
No, the movement of oxygen from the lungs to the bloodstream is not by osmosis. Instead, it occurs through a process called diffusion, where oxygen molecules move from an area of high concentration (in the lungs) to an area of lower concentration (in the bloodstream) to reach equilibrium.