The aorta is a large artery that carries oxygenated blood from the heart to the body. The alveoli are small air sacs in the lungs where gas exchange occurs. The connection between the aorta and alveoli is through the process of oxygen exchange, where oxygen from the inhaled air diffuses into the blood in the alveoli and is then carried by the aorta to the body tissues.
Oxygen is removed from the alveoli by the cappillaries.
Carbon dioxide does.
Oxygen diffuses from the alveoli into the blood because of a concentration gradient. The partial pressure of oxygen in the alveoli is higher than in the blood, so oxygen moves across the thin membrane of the alveoli into the blood to reach equilibrium.
Bronchi are in the lungs. Off the two bronchi branches are broncioles and off of those are alveoli which take in the oxygen
your lungs have structures called alveoli. The alveoli are surrounded by capillary beds which carry blood. The oxygen enters the alveoli when you inhale. The oxygen then diffuses from high concentration in your alveoli to low concentration the blood in the capillaries surrounding the alveoli.
broncheoli are the branches carrying air from the bronchi to the alveoli..
alveoli son..
Partial pressure affects the movement of oxygen from the alveoli to the blood because it is the main driving force for oxygen movement in the lungs.Oxygen passes from the air to the fluid within the alveoli, into the cell of the alveoli.
In the lungs, oxygen diffuses from the air sacs into the blood in the capillaries lining the alveoli. The oxygen then binds to hemoglobin molecules in red blood cells. Hemoglobin carries the oxygen-rich blood to tissues throughout the body, where oxygen is released for cellular respiration.
Alveoli takes oxygen in and brings out carbon dioxide.
It diffuses into the blood capillaries surrounding the alveoli.