Sky Diving: There will be parchutes available, so that people can sky dive. People will be able to jump from the epiglottis, and will land at the abdominal aorta.
The Wind Tunnel: People will be able to fly in the wind tunnel. Jets of air will shoot out of the floor, ceiling, and sides of the wind tunnel. This will enable someone to balance in midair.
Hangliding: Hangliders will be available for visitors to use. The visitors are free to hanglide all around the lungs.
The hot spot in the respiratory system are the lungs and the diaphragm.
Diagram of the respiratory system
Diagram of a segment of bronchial tree
1.The Parts Of The Respiratory System:
Alveoli: A tiny, thin-walled, capillary-rich sac in the lungs where the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place.
Bronchi: Either of two main branches of the trachea, leading directly to the lungs.
Bronchioles: A small branch of the bronchus.
Diaphragm: A muscular membranous partition separating the abdominal and thoracic cavities and functioning in respiration.
Lungs: Either of two spongy, saclike respiratory organs in most vertebrates, occupying the chest cavity together with the heart and functioning to remove carbon dioxide from the blood and provide it with oxygen.
Trachea: A thin-walled tube of cartilaginous and membranous tissue descending from the larynx to the bronchi and carrying air to the lungs.
2. The diaphragm is the muscle that controls the breathing process. As the diaphragm flattens it causes the chest to expand and air is sucked into the lungs. When the diaphragm relaxes, the chest collapses and the air in the lungs is forced out. It is located at the bottom of the rib cage. The ribs have the intercostal muscles between them which helps with the inhalation and exhalation.
3. Although breathing is usually an involuntary process, it can be controlled by how the chemistry of your blood interacts with a part of your brain called the medulla oblongata. This part of your brain helps maintain homeostasis. It responds to higher levels of carbon dioxide your blood by sending nerve signals to the rib muscles and diaphragm. As a result, these muscles contract as you inhale.
4. The trachea is a pipe shaped by rings of cartilage. It divides into two tubes called bronchi. These carry air into each lung. Inside the lung, the tubes divide into smaller and smaller tubes called bronchiolies. At the end of each of these tubes are small air balloons called alveoli. Capillaries, which are small blood vessels with thin walls, are wrapped around these alveolies. The walls are so thin and close to each other that the air easily seeps through. In this way, oxygen seeps through into the bloodstream and carbon dioxide, in the bloodstream, seeps through into the alveoli, and is then removed from the body when we breathe out.
WATCH OUT FOR THE STRONG WINDS, THESE WINDS CAN EASILY THROW SOMEONE A COUPLE HUNDRED YARDS.
The respiratory system imports a lot of oxygen from the air outside of the human body.
The respiratory system exports carbon dioxide from the lungs and out of the human body.