Air enters the body through the mouth or nose, travels down the trachea, passes through the bronchial tubes in the lungs, and finally reaches the alveoli where oxygen is absorbed into the bloodstream and carbon dioxide is released. This process allows for gas exchange to occur in the lungs.
The main forces that cause a projectile to curve as it travels are gravity and air resistance. Gravity pulls the projectile downward, causing it to follow a curved path. Air resistance can also affect the trajectory of the projectile, particularly by slowing it down and altering its path.
The path that water takes as it travels between the earth and the air is called the water cycle. It involves processes such as evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff, which contribute to the continuous movement and distribution of water on Earth.
The motion of a body that travels around another body in space is called orbiting or revolution. The body that is being orbited is typically much larger and exerts a gravitational force that keeps the orbiting body in motion around it. This motion follows a specific path determined by the balance between the gravitational force and the velocity of the orbiting body.
Light travels fastest when moving through a vacuum because there are no particles to obstruct its path. In other mediums (like air, water, or glass), light travels at a slower speed due to interactions with the atoms and molecules in the medium.
When you breathe you suck air from your mouth or nose!
Orbit is the path that a body follows as it travels around another body in space.
Orbit is the path
An orbit.
It is an orbit.
Orbit
It goes out the same path that it came in.
Light always takes the shortest path possible through any medium. As such, when it travels through a vacuum, it travels in a straight line (no refraction). When it travels through the air, the molecules in the air scatter it very slightly, causing some diffusion and refraction, depending on the composition of the air through which it passes. When it travels through water, the shortest path through that medium is not a straight, collinear line from the point of incidence...it is actually offset by a small angle (the angle of refraction). The bent path that light takes through water or another substance is actually the shortest path available to it through that medium.
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Your lungs lets out air and it travels through your nose
A rocket's path is typically referred to as its trajectory. This trajectory is influenced by factors such as thrust, gravity, and air resistance, determining the path the rocket will follow as it travels through space.
The main forces that cause a projectile to curve as it travels are gravity and air resistance. Gravity pulls the projectile downward, causing it to follow a curved path. Air resistance can also affect the trajectory of the projectile, particularly by slowing it down and altering its path.