because you throat vibrates when you sing or speak
Very interesting analogy, although perhaps taking a bit of imagination. Perhaps a subway station would be a better analogy. I'm thinking of the capillaries being trains, perhaps the Red blood cells being the train cars. The alveolar/capillary walls and the pores of Kohn would be the doors. The Alveoli would be the walkways. Air being crowds of people milling about. As the RBC's pass by, the Carbon Dioxide gets off the train, passes through the capillary walls and into the alveoli joining the crowds of "air" milling about, while oxygen passes the other way. I believe it is all a passive process. So the boarding / deboarding is only a will to go where fewer Oxygen or Carbon Dioxide molecules are. And in theory it could be two way with excess oxygen getting off, and perhaps reboarding. And Carbon Dioxide getting off and back on too. But, in general, more carbon dioxide gets off and more oxygen gets on.
Balloon lungs work in the respiratory system by expanding and contracting to help with the exchange of gases. When we breathe in, the lungs inflate like a balloon, allowing oxygen to enter the bloodstream. When we breathe out, the lungs deflate, releasing carbon dioxide. This process helps to bring oxygen to the body's cells and remove waste gases.
Popularly called MegLev there are two different modes of operation. When the train is still at the station it can be held by magnets. In motion electromagnets are like an electric motor that has been flattened out. The stator on the ground ( the tracks ) and the rotor being the train. The train is confined with magnets and electromagnets. The linear motor can be in the train, "the tracks" or both. Preferable would be a combination with the tracks pushing and levitating the train along with permanent magnets. The train with balancing magnets and electromagnets to keep it in the track and going. There is a way of putting the magnets together with their fields at right angles to each other. This puts the magnetic force on one side.
An electric train works by using electricity from overhead wires or a third rail to power an electric motor, which then drives the train's wheels to move it along the tracks.
The model of lungs with a balloon demonstrates how the lungs expand and contract during the breathing process. When the balloon is inflated, it represents the lungs filling with air during inhalation. When the balloon deflates, it shows the lungs releasing air during exhalation. This model helps visualize how the lungs work to take in oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the body.
He worked in a german train station.
Unhealthy lungs work just like healthy ones. They're just less efficient.
If you don't have much stuff, you can use a train station to move. If you mean why people move to places which have train stations, that is so they travel once they get there. You might need that to look for another place to move or to commute to work.
Very interesting analogy, although perhaps taking a bit of imagination. Perhaps a subway station would be a better analogy. I'm thinking of the capillaries being trains, perhaps the Red blood cells being the train cars. The alveolar/capillary walls and the pores of Kohn would be the doors. The Alveoli would be the walkways. Air being crowds of people milling about. As the RBC's pass by, the Carbon Dioxide gets off the train, passes through the capillary walls and into the alveoli joining the crowds of "air" milling about, while oxygen passes the other way. I believe it is all a passive process. So the boarding / deboarding is only a will to go where fewer Oxygen or Carbon Dioxide molecules are. And in theory it could be two way with excess oxygen getting off, and perhaps reboarding. And Carbon Dioxide getting off and back on too. But, in general, more carbon dioxide gets off and more oxygen gets on.
How does the lungs work with the stomach
How does the lungs work with the stomach
Hachico was a dog whose owner died at work and Hachico waited at a train station for a few days for his owner. Then Hachico came back and forth from the train station for 10 years! Soon after Hachico died :( .If that's not the Hachico you are talking about then i don't know who is.
To make the lungs work and if our lungs didn't work then we couldn't breathe.
in a police station like other cops
Great
He would wake up at 7 a.m. And Come home at 10 p.m.
bus and train isn't it like 2 dollars to ride the train in ny?