Science, asked by vpraneeth2308, 1 month ago

The muscle bulges due
to contraction ​


sarahuzumaki998: yeah
vpraneeth2308: it's wrong
sarahuzumaki998: mkay

Answers

Answered by basavasr69
0

Answer:

The harder you contract your muscle, the bigger it looks. But of course the muscle doesn't actually get bigger, it just bulges about its middle. The muscle is able to shorten, and bulge as a result, because it attaches to spring-like tendons, which stretch slightly when the force is applied

hope this answers your question

mark has brainliest


basavasr69: check your question
Anonymous: yes please check your question.
Anonymous: This is the correct answer
basavasr69: then mark has brainliest
Anonymous: Brother, first you give me the mark of Branliest, then I give you Branliest.
basavasr69: The harder you contract your muscle, the bigger it looks. ... The muscle is able to shorten, and bulge as a result, because it attaches to spring-like tendons, which stretch slightly when the force is applied. So why does the muscle bulge out when it shortens? Muscle volume does not change with contraction.
basavasr69: sorry not that this one
basavasr69: The muscles bulge because they get smaller in length when they contract. This gets back to normal when we release the pressure and straighten out arm. When we bend an arm or wrist, there is a slight change in the shape of our arm. The inner part swells due to the muscular contraction on the inside of our arm.
basavasr69: hope this answers your question
basavasr69: mark now has brainliest
Answered by Anonymous
0

Explanation:

The harder you contract your muscle, the bigger it looks. But of course the muscle doesn't actually get bigger, it just bulges about its middle. The muscle is able to shorten, and bulge as a result, because it attaches to spring-like tendons, which stretch slightly when the force is applied.

Similar questions