It's commonly said that if you were able to extract all 300 million (or so) of the lungs' alveoli (the smallest units of gas exchange), unravel each so it formed a flat piece of tissue, then lay each alveolus down side by side, they would cover an entire tennis court. Has this ever been done? Heck no. But approximations have been made, and it seems like this is relatively correct.
If they were opened up they could cover an average tennis court.
If you unfolded all the folds and branches in your lungs, the area it would cover would equal about one half of a tennis court.
as long as a regular tennis court.
no one knows, this is a very stupid question, why do you need to know this??
The human lungs have roughly the same surface area as a tennis court if they were to be laid out. This is 2,808 square feet, or 260.87 square meters.
No, this is a myth. While the total internal surface area of the lungs is roughly the size of a tennis court, flattening them out to the size of a football field is inaccurate. The lungs are complex organs that fill the space within the chest cavity and cannot be equated to a flat surface area.
Yes, they can measure to the size of a tennis court.No, it is not. It is only about the size of a small hotel bathroom floor, not including the tub.
"Tennis court" in English is court de tennis in French.
Clay courts are known to be the slowest tennis court.
A tennis Court.:S
You say "a lit tennis court." ex. Tennis courts are lit at night.
On-Court Tennis was created in 1984.