In longitudinal section, the walls of the atria are thinner, and lined with pestinate muscles. The walls of the ventricles, meanwhile, are thick and muscular.
When relaxed, the atria expand, and then the ventricles contract.
Yes, atria contracts before the ventricles.
Atria is the receiving chamber and it is located at the top while ventricles are the one responsible for pumping blood out of the heart either to oxygenate the blood or to deliver it into our systems and it is located at the bottom part of the heart
the difference between the ventricles and the atria is that the ventricles are thicker
In the context of the heart, the ventricles are not considered superior; they are actually located inferior to the atria. The atria are positioned above the ventricles, receiving blood from the body and lungs before it is pumped into the ventricles. Therefore, in anatomical terms, the atria are superior to the ventricles.
The Atria and Ventricles are parts of the heart not the blood. The Atria is the upper chambers of the heart and the Ventricles are the lower chambers of the heart.
ventricles
The atria are on the top, and ventricles on the bottom. The atria are smaller, and the ventricles bigger. The atria receive blood coming into the heart, and the ventricles send blood out of the heart. The contraction of the atria end diastole, and the contraction of the ventricles end systole.
There are no valves between the atria. The valves between the atria and ventricles close when the ventricles contract.
atria are just the receiving chambers, it is the ventricles that actually pump the blood into the pulmonary and systemic circuits
I believe this would be your heart because that is the only time ventricles and atria are brought up.
Assuming you mean the atria and ventricles by "the two heart chambers", the fact that in all species the atria are smaller than the ventricles reflects the fact that the atria receive blood from either the body or the lungs and then pump it into the larger and much stronger ventricles. One-way valves between the atria and ventricles prevent backflow of blood from the ventricles to the atria. The ventricles then pump the blood received from the atria to either the oxygenating organ (i.e. gills or lungs) or the body. The much thicker walls of the ventricles reflect the fact that much greater force is needed to pump the blood throughout the body or to the lungs than is needed to pump the blood from the atria to the ventricles.