All I can say is that when you breath in, you take in air and extract the oxygen. When you exhale you're letting out the nitrogen that was with the oxygen in the air. The oxygen then goes to your blood. How this happens? I can't say.
Sorry.
The lungs are responsible for taking in oxygen from the air we breathe and transferring it into the bloodstream. This occurs through the process of gas exchange in the lungs where oxygen moves into the blood vessels in exchange for carbon dioxide.
Oxygen is in the air, and when you breathe in the oxygen gets into your lungs and is absorbed into the red blood cells.
When you heck up, you accually swollowed the saliva and it went in to one of the tubes in the windpipe and the saliva gets into your lungs and when you breathe in, you take in oxygen. And when you breathe out, it wanted to breathe out of the lungs but it is stuck. So that why you heck up
your trachea is the tube in your neck that gets the oxygen to your lungs when you inhale (breathe in) and ejects carbon dioxide when you exhale (breathe out)
Your nose is an important organ for many reasons: 1.) It lets you smell. 2.) It cleans the air that you breathe before it enters your lungs. 3.) It protects you by filtering and humidifying the air you breathe to prevent dryness of the lining of the lungs. 4.) It also warms cold air to body temperature before it gets to your lungs. AND DO YOU KNOW THAT IT ALSO HELPS YOU TASTE THE FOOD YOU EAT?!
Oh, dude, that's easy. So, there's this thing called "respiration" where your body takes in oxygen and gets rid of carbon dioxide. It happens in your lungs, where the oxygen gets absorbed into your blood and the carbon dioxide gets released. It's like a little exchange program happening in your body all the time, keeping you alive and stuff.
Through their nose because I have a blue tongue and when his nose gets wet, he sneeze/snorts to get rid of the water.
Yes, lungs play a very important part in respiration. They are part of the respiratory system. When you breathe in, air gets into your lungs and exchanges oxygen with carbon dioxide with red blood cells. When you breathe out, the carbon dioxide is released.
The process of obtaining oxygen from the air we breathe is known as respiration. During respiration, the lungs take in oxygen from the air and deliver it to the bloodstream, where it is then transported to the body's cells to produce energy through a series of chemical reactions.
To breathe. Transport oxygen to lungs & then to bloodstream where it gets carried to brain, muscles, etc.
Oxygen enters the bloodstream through the process of diffusion in the lungs. When we breathe in, oxygen passes through tiny air sacs in the lungs called alveoli and diffuses into the bloodstream through the thin walls of the capillaries surrounding the alveoli. This oxygen-rich blood is then pumped to the rest of the body by the heart.
No, but they do some good by preprocessing the air you breathe in before it reaches the lungs. Some dust is trapped and the temperature gets regulated