Which bundles of cells in the lungs that take in oxygen

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Hello,

The bundle of cells in the lungs that take in oxygen is "Red blood cells".

Have A Good Day.

Related Questions

Polaris, the North Star, is almost always visible in the same location because A) it is the brightest star in the sky. B) it is gravitationally attracted to our sun. C) it is the closest star to the earth, besides our sun. Eliminate D) the axis of the earth passes directly through the North Star.
What is electric current measured in
Explain the Impulse-Momentum Theorem.
Nuclei of uranium atoms split apart is___?
Write the alignment of the Moon the Sun and the Earth causes a spring tide

Time period of a simple pendulum if it makes 40 oscillations in 20 seconds.

Answers

(20 sec)/(40 swings) = 0.5 sec/swing

Which of these is NOT an example of work? A. Holding a heavy book
B. Pushing a wheelbarrow
C. Lifting weights

Answers

The correct answer is A. Holding a heavy book.

In this case, there is not a displacement of the system and you must remember that work is force times displacement.
the correct answer is actually A

Which statement describes the relationship between the rate of reaction and the temperature?

Answers

PM me the statements, and i'll answer it then.

What determines the number of possible sublevels?A.
the principal energy level
B.
the shape of the orbital
C.
the energy of the orbital
D.
the ground state

Answers

Hello!

The answer is A.   the principal energy level

Why?

The principal energy level or principal quantum number n, tell us about the position of an determined electron in the energy levels relative to the greater average distance of an electron from the nucleus, the larger the value of n and the higher its energy.

The principal energy levels contains n sublevels, n^(2) orbitals and 2n^(2) electrons.

For example, the number 1, has one orbital which is contained in a energy sublevel, its called s orbital, and it's just an orbital with 2 electrons.

Have a nice day!

The answer for your question is A I agree with the other person

Can you explain that gravity pulls us to the Earth & can you calculate weight from masses on both on Earth and other planets?

Answers

I don't actually understand what your question is, but I'll dance around the subject
for a while, and hope that you get something out of it.

-- The effect of gravity is:  There's a pair of forces, in both directions, between
every two masses.

-- The strength of the force depends on the product of the masses, so it doesn't matter whether there's a big one and a small one, or whether they're nearly equal. 
It's the product that counts.  Bigger product ==> stronger force, in direct proportion.

-- The strength of the forces also depends on the distance between the objects' centers.  More distance => weaker force.  Actually, (more distance)² ==> weaker force.

-- The forces are equal in both directions.  Your weight on Earth is exactly equal to
the Earth's weight on you.  You can prove that.  Turn your bathroom scale face down
and stand on it.  Now it's measuring the force that attracts the Earth toward you. 
If you put a little mirror down under the numbers, you'll see that it's the same as
the force that attracts you toward the Earth when the scale is right-side-up.

-- When you (or a ball) are up on the roof and step off, the force of gravity that pulls
you (or the ball) toward the Earth causes you (or the ball) to accelerate (fall) toward the Earth. 
Also, the force that attracts the Earth toward you (or the ball) causes the Earth to accelerate (fall) toward you (or the ball).
The forces are equal.  But since the Earth has more mass than you have, you accelerate toward the Earth faster than the Earth accelerates toward you.

--  This works exactly the same for every pair of masses in the universe.  Gravity
is everywhere.  You can't turn it off, and you can't shield anything from it.

-- Sometimes you'll hear about some mysterious way to "defy gravity".  It's not possible to 'defy' gravity, but since we know that it's there, we can work with it.
If we want to move something in the opposite direction from where gravity is pulling it, all we need to do is provide a force in that direction that's stronger than the force of gravity.
I know that sounds complicated, so here are a few examples of how we do it:
-- use arm-muscle force to pick a book UP off the table
-- use leg-muscle force to move your whole body UP the stairs
-- use buoyant force to LIFT a helium balloon or a hot-air balloon 
-- use the force of air resistance to LIFT an airplane.

-- The weight of 1 kilogram of mass on or near the Earth is 9.8 newtons.  (That's
about 2.205 pounds).  The same kilogram of mass has different weights on other planets. Wherever it is, we only know one of the masses ... the kilogram.  In order
to figure out what it weighs there, we need to know the mass of the planet, and
the distance between the kilogram and the center of the planet.

I hope I told you something that you were actually looking for.

Suppose you see two stars that have the same apparent magnitude if one star is actually four times as far away as the other how much brighter would be the farther star really be?

Answers

1/4 brighter hope this helps