heatherjudd wrote:There is a word missing from your question:
"Question: Measuring the velocity of blood flow in the circulatory system, the student discovers that the artery has a blood flow velocity that is significantly _______ than a..."
As I don't have the details - I'll assume this actually depends on something 'violating' the continuity equation. My expectation is that this question is going to be based on the underlying physiology of arterioles/capillaries. My background is in physics/math, but is it not the case that one arteriole is connected to more than one capillary? The continuity equation says essentially that if one part of a system moves 1L/s then another part must too because the blood has to go somewhere (can't escape, won't compress). If an arteriole splits into two capillaries then the 1L/s is made of of 0.5L/s moving through each capillary. If I only examined one of these, it would appear to violate the continuity equation.
If this hasn't answered you question, can you please let me know the detail/question source?
Thanks
Hi there,
Thanks! The question detail was : Measuring the velocity of blood flow in the circulatory system, the student discovers that the artery has a blood flow velocity that is significantly
greater than a..."
I understand the logic as you have outlined, but I'm not sure how to get to the correct answer. Wouldn't B encapsulate that logic?