The percentage of oxygen in air remains fairly constant on a global scale but varies considerably on a local scale. The concentration of oxygen in your lungs is much different as you inhale than when you exhale for example. The concentration of oxygen entering your car's engine is much different than the concentration in the exhaust from that same engine.
The percentage remains fairly constant on a macroscopic scale because of the equilibrium established by the uptake by plants of the carbon dioxide and subsequent release of oxygen through photosynthesis. There is also a substantial amount of oxygen dissolved into the oceans of the Earth which remains in equilibrium with the oxygen in the air. Just based on the scale, it would take an enormous amount of oxygen addition or removal from the atmosphere to make a significant change in the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere. Such a change would take a very long time to accomplish. In truth, the composition of the atmosphere millions of years ago was different than now - with noticeably higher levels at times and lower levels at other times. It took millions of years for the changes to occur however.
Air pressure decreases as you go up in elevation because there is less air pushing down from above. This can lead to lower oxygen levels, making it more difficult to breathe at higher elevations.
The air we breathe is mainly composed of oxygen and nitrogen. When we inhale, our lungs absorb the oxygen into the bloodstream for our cells to use, and then we exhale the unused oxygen along with carbon dioxide. The air we breathe eventually gets exhaled back into the atmosphere.
The oxygen that is produced in photosynthesis goes into the air.
When plants go through photosynthesis, they release oxygen into the air. Any plant, including greens, that go through photosynthesis produce oxygen. The oxygen that is produced, we use it.
it will go down
Because - the higher up the atmosphere you go - the less oxygen is in the air you breathe. Our bodies need a certain percentage of the air we breathe to be Oxygen - reduce the amount of oxygen in each breath, and it soon affects the body.
Air has weight. The weight of all the air above pushes down, squeezing on the lower levels. Think of a column of air seven miles high, pressing down on air at ground level. We call this pressing down force " air pressure ". The amount of oxygen in the atmosphere is close to the same whether you are at 30,000 feet or down at sea level, the difference is the pressure. Humans get oxygen into their blood by breathing air into our lungs where air pressure forces it into our blood. When you go up to very high altitudes, the oxygen is still there, but there is not enough pressure to force it into our blood and we would suffer from 'hypoxia', or, a lack of oxygen.
Air pressure decreases as you go up in elevation because there is less air pushing down from above. This can lead to lower oxygen levels, making it more difficult to breathe at higher elevations.
The air we breathe is mainly composed of oxygen and nitrogen. When we inhale, our lungs absorb the oxygen into the bloodstream for our cells to use, and then we exhale the unused oxygen along with carbon dioxide. The air we breathe eventually gets exhaled back into the atmosphere.
The oxygen that is produced in photosynthesis goes into the air.
When plants go through photosynthesis, they release oxygen into the air. Any plant, including greens, that go through photosynthesis produce oxygen. The oxygen that is produced, we use it.
The frogs' chin goes down, pulling air into the vocal sac. Then, it's nostrils shut and the chin goes up, forcing the air into the lungs. When they oxygen is taken, the chin will go down, pulling the air our of the lungs. Then the nostrils open up, and the chin will go up, pushing the air our of the chin. Then repeats.
When something burns, it needs oxygen to stay alight. There is oxygen in the air, and that lets a flame keep burning. If you were to put a glass over a flame, a candle for example, the fire would go out once it had used all of the oxygen inside and turned it into carbon dioxide.
it will go down
Oxygen is what you breathe. only 20% of the air is oxygen. there ya go!
Yes, when we breathe in, oxygen from the air enters our lungs. This oxygen is then absorbed into the bloodstream through tiny air sacs in the lungs called alveoli.
the oxygen goes to the air sacs inside of the lungs.