Page 134 - PPL - engelsk - Air Law and Human Performance
P. 134

Human Performance



                   Amphibians, such as frogs, have primitive lungs but can also absorb oxygen

                   through their skin.


                   Reptiles,  birds,  and  mammals  (including  humans)  cannot  absorb  oxygen

                   through their skin but have highly specialized lungs.




                 2.3.1    The lungs


                 The  figure  below  illustrates

                 the structure of the lungs.




                 Air enters the lungs through

                 the nose and mouth, passing

                 through  the  throat  and

                 trachea.



                 The trachea is stiff due to cartilage rings, which keep the airway open. These

                 rings can be felt at the front of the neck.


                 The trachea divides into two main branches, called primary bronchi, leading to

                 each lung. These bronchi further divide into smaller bronchi, which branch out

                 into even smaller tubes called bronchioles.




                 2.3.1.1    Alveoli


                 At  the  ends  of  the  bronchioles  are  small  sacs  called  alveoli.  This  is  where

                 oxygen is absorbed, and carbon dioxide is released.

                 The  alveolis  are  in  close  contact  with  pulmonary  capillaries,  meaning  the

                 distance between air in the alveoli and blood in the capillaries is very short—

                 approximately 0.2 μm.

                 Capillaries form a network around the alveoli. This close contact ensures that

                 hemoglobin in the blood can easily absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide.



            Flight Theory PPL(A)(UL)/LAPL             Henning Andersen, Midtjysk Flyveskole© 2025          134
   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139