Easy!
In the body, carbon dioxide is produced as a waste product of cellular metabolism. Cells produce carbon dioxide when they break down glucose and other nutrients to generate energy through a process called cellular respiration. Carbon dioxide is then transported in the blood to the lungs, where it is exhaled from the body during breathing.
Yes, plants help the environment by absorbing carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and converting it into oxygen. This process helps in reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, thus playing a vital role in mitigating climate change.
It goes up in the winter when the plants and trees in the northern hemisphere stop growing (and so stop removing carbon dioxide from the air). When spring arrives vegetation starts to grow again and the levels reduce slightly.
Yes, trees absorb the powerful greenhouse gas of carbon dioxide. Photosynthesis is the process where all vegetation absorbs CO2 from the air, store the carbon and release the oxygen. So forests are carbon sinks, that is storage areas for carbon. This is why afforestation is important so we can slow and stop global warming.
The quickest way to reduce the build up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is to decrease the burning of fossil fuels by transitioning to renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind power. Additionally, promoting energy efficiency and reforestation efforts can help absorb more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
When magnesium carbonate is added to hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs that produces magnesium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. The fizzing you see is the carbon dioxide gas being released. Once all the carbon dioxide has been produced and released, the fizzing stops.
Carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere from many sources including our breathing. This carbon dioxide is the pollution that causes global warming. Trees naturally absorb carbon dioxide to create energy and therefore stop it from being released into the atmosphere. This is why we need to conserve our forests.
Breathing is the only process where exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide occurs. Oxygen is being delivered to the body parts where oxygen is needed, whilst removing carbon dioxide.
Dying
In the body, carbon dioxide is produced as a waste product of cellular metabolism. Cells produce carbon dioxide when they break down glucose and other nutrients to generate energy through a process called cellular respiration. Carbon dioxide is then transported in the blood to the lungs, where it is exhaled from the body during breathing.
All activities release carbon dioxide in the blood stream. As long as you are alive, your cells will continue to produce carbon dioxide. Even resting or sleeping will not stop it.
No, carbon dioxide does not. it does not stop UV rays from the sun from coming to surface.
Both are carried away from wherever they are produced in the blood and water is also taken in the lymph. Excess water is excreted in its warious ways. The carbon dioxide is carried away in the blood to the lungs where it transfers into the alveoli and is excreted in the exhalation breath.
we will all die :)
We can stop the extra carbon dioxide emissions that are causing global warming only by:ReforestationAfforestationMoving to renewable non-polluting energyStop burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) in industry, transport and the generation of electricity.
we will die and human kind itself disappear
The steady increase in carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere come from our use of fossil fuels. If we were able to stop using fossil fuels, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would stop rising. Biofuels are a partial answer, because by using biofuels you are reducing our use of fossil fuels.