well it is the arm vessel i remember right well duu im in college haha its the arm vessel
Oxygenated blood into the left ventricle
The vena cava carries deoxygenated blood into the left atrium.
The left atrium. The blood has just returned from the lungs, so it is oxygenated. The left atrium will empty into the left ventricle, which can pump this newly oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.
The structures that empty into the left atrium are the four pulmonary veins, which carry oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart. This blood is then pumped into the left ventricle to be distributed throughout the body.
The Pulmonary Artery which takes the deoxygenated blood to the lungs.
The superior vena cava and inferior vena cava are the two vessels that return oxygen-poor blood to the heart. Both empty into the heart's right atrium.
Two pulmonary veins empty blood into the left atrium.Deoxygenated blood enters the right atrium, then the right ventricle which pumps the blood to the lungs where it is oxygenated. The two pulmonary veins then take the newly oxygenated blood back to the heart through the left atrium and into the left ventricle which then pumps the oxygenated blood around the rest of the body.
To calculate the weight of an empty pressure vessel, you can determine the volume of the vessel and then multiply it by the density of the material from which the vessel is made. This will give you the mass of the vessel, which you can then convert to weight by multiplying it by the acceleration due to gravity.
The left ventricle, being responsible for pumping the blood through the systemic circulation, generates the highest pressures. For this reason, the left ventricle has the thickest muscular walls.
When a vessel in empty on the inside meaning there is nothing inside the vessel it is called empty. Some other words are vacant or unoccupied and in reality it is just empty.
right atrium is the chamber of heart in which the veins empty themselves of deoxygenated blood from all parts of body. right atrium always carry the deoxygenated blood and then pumps it into right ventricle....
Right atrium to the right ventricle through the pulmonary arteries to the lungs back to the pulmonary veins to the left atrium and then left ventricle. From the left ventricle blood will exit the heart through the aorta. The renal arteries branch directly off of the abdominal aorta which flow to the kidneys. Blood will filter through the kidneys and return to the bloodstream through the renal veins which empty into the inferior vena cava which then empties into the right arium of the heart.