stored?
When you skip breakfast, your body doesn’t have new glucose to make energy. Glucose is
the main fuel that your cells use to make ATP, which powers your body. Even though fat
stores can also be used for energy, they take longer to break down. This means your body
can’t make ATP as fast, so you start feeling weak or tired. Eating breakfast gives your body
quick glucose to make energy right away and keeps you active throughout the day
2. When you eat lunch, how does that food actually give your muscles energy to move?
After you eat lunch, your digestive system breaks food into small molecules like glucose.
The glucose moves into your bloodstream and then into your cells. Inside the cells, glucose
reacts with oxygen through a process called cellular respiration. This reaction makes ATP,
which stores energy in its chemical bonds. When your muscles need to move, ATP breaks
apart and releases that energy. This energy powers muscle contractions that allow you to
walk, lift, or run. Without the constant production of ATP from food, your muscles wouldn’t
have the power to move or perform even simple actions
3. Why does your body temperature stay around 37°C (98.6°F) even when it’s cold
outside?
Your body stays around 37°C because it’s always using energy from metabolism. When
cells break down food to make ATP, not all that energy becomes stored energy; some is lost
as heat. This heat helps your body maintain a constant temperature, which is important for
enzyme function and other chemical reactions that keep you alive. According to the laws of
thermodynamics, energy changes are never perfect; some energy always escapes as heat.
That heat keeps your body warm, even when the air outside is cold. This balance, called
homeostasis, helps your body work properly no matter the weather
4. When a runner starts sprinting, where does the energy come from within seconds of
movement?
When a runner starts sprinting, the body first uses ATP that’s already stored in the muscles.
This gives instant energy for just a few seconds. Then, muscles use another molecule
called creatine phosphate to make more ATP quickly. After those short-term stores run out,
the body begins breaking down glucose to make ATP through cellular respiration. This
process continues to supply energy for the rest of the run. The quick switch between stored
ATP, creatine phosphate, and glucose shows how the body has backup systems to keep
energy flowing when movement begins