The diaphragm moves down and contracts, flattening itself, when you inhale.
When you inhale, the diaphragm contracts and moves downward. This movement creates more space in the chest cavity, allowing the lungs to expand and fill with air.
No, as you inhale the diaphragm is contracting and pulling down, expanding the lungs. As you breathe out, the muscle relaxes and rises up again.
Upwards, toward the head.
When you inhale, oxygen fills your lungs. Next the oxygen diffuses out of your lungs into your bloodstream. The diffusion of oxygen from the lungs causes less pressure in your lungs signaling your brain that you need to inhale.
The diaphragm moves down and contracts, flattening itself, when you inhale.
When you inhale, the diaphragm contracts and moves downward. This movement creates more space in the chest cavity, allowing the lungs to expand and fill with air.
When you inhale, your diaphragm contracts and moves downward. This action creates a vacuum in your chest cavity, drawing air into your lungs. The expansion of the lungs allows for oxygen to be absorbed into the bloodstream.
No, as you inhale the diaphragm is contracting and pulling down, expanding the lungs. As you breathe out, the muscle relaxes and rises up again.
When you inhale, your diaphragm contracts dropping down causing negative pressure in your thoracic cavity(lung area) so that air can circulate through the lungs.
you inhale when your diaphragm contracts.
When the diaphragm contracts and moves lower, the chest cavity enlarges, reducing the pressure outside the lungs. To equalize the pressure, air enters the lungs. When the diaphragm relaxes and moves back up, the elasticity of the lungs and chest wall pushes air out of the lungs.
it expands as we inhale and contrasts as we exhale...this allows our lungs to fill up with air without pushing on out rib cage the rib cage moves up and out when inhaling and moves down and in when exhaling.
To breath in it is inhale, to breath out is exhale.
When we inhale in and out oxygen moves from the alveoli to blood carbon dioxide moves from blood to alveoli.
inhale, hammer, final cutter and stone
the teacher said "calm down and inhale slowly. One, two. One, two".