i hav no idea
Exercise, and heat.
No. The resting pulse becomes slower. (Note, the top pulse rate for everybody is about the same ... the "exercise tolerance" comes from how much you can increase from your resting rate.)
Yes, the increase in cardio resprotory speeds up the heart rate and pulse.
== exercise effect the pulse because if you walk it doesnt effect it but if you run it does effect it because the heart is pumping faster so the blood is moving faster = Actually, pulse rate can change with walking, too, just not as much. Pulse rate is lowest when the body is resting, and increases as the level of muscle activity increases, since increases in activity make higher demands for oxygen for the muscles to work. The pulse rate quickens in response to the body's need for more oxygen (and for more disposal of the carbon dioxide formed in the muscles and other tissues from combining oxygen and the carbons in glucose or fat as they are burned for fuel, thus providing energy for the muscles to use to contract). SImply standing up is more exercise than resting, and although we don't usually think of simply standing up as exercise, the pulse rate will increase slightly. Further increases in exercise level, such as walking, will increase the pulse rate further, even though we might not sense the increase in pulse rate until periods of heavier exercise such as running.
your pulse rate increases so your breathing rates can increase which allows you to take in more oxygen to transfer to your blood.
The pulse rate goes up as the strenuousness of the exercise increases.
Your heart rate will increase when you exercise for a prolonged period or when you increase your effort. An increase in intensity might occur if you are riding your bike and you encounter a hill or a stiff headwind. Your heart rate will increase as you put more effort into maintaining your speed.
slower
The pulse is a measure of the heart rate.
The pulse rate is determined by how much blood the heart pumps per beat vs how much blood flow is needed to maintain proper oxygenation. The best way to decrease the pulse rate is to make the heart a more efficient pump, making it pump more with each beat. The most effective and safest way to do this is to exercise. As the body gets into better shape, the heart will strengthen and will be able to pump more blood with each beat, and thus lowering the pulse rate. As a result of exercise, some well trained athletes have pulse rates in the upper 40's to low 50's.
an increase in pulse rate
recovery time makes the pulse rate normal=)