Muscles work in antagonistic pairs, this is because muscles can only contract, when one muscle contracts the other one relaxes such as bending the leg, the hamstring would contract whilst the quadriceps relax.
One side contracts and the other side releases. Picture a rod, when the underside contracts and the top side loosens the rod can bend down (one side is getting tighter and the other side is getting more slack. If only one side gets loose and the other side does not, it won't actuall move the muscel much. If both contract then the muscel will try to move in two separate directions at once, same if it looses. They have to work in opposing pairs for steady movement.
Because a muscle can only contract (=pull) to exert its force, so to be able to move in both directions there has to be another muscle whose pull will cause the first muscle to stretch out againnnnnn.
Because muscles cannot exert force by pushing (expanding) only by pulling (contracting).
Because muscles can only pull. In order to be able to both bend and straighten a limbyou have to have a muscle on each side of the joint.
Since muscles cannot push, only pull, one muscle relaxes while one contracts and vice vice versa depending on the action you are doing
because they doo
pairs of muscles that work together
pairs of muscles that work together
Skeletal muscles only pull in one direction. For this reason they always come in pairs. When one muscle in a pair contracts, to bend a joint for example, its counterpart then contracts and pulls in the opposite direction to straighten the joint out again.
Muscles can only exert force by getting shorter. Muscles work in pairs by one muscle pulling in one direction, the other muscle pulls in the opposite direction. One bends your leg, the other straightens the leg, etc.
Yes. Skeletal muscles will have a flexor and an extensor. The flexor bends the joint. The extensor straightens it out again.
ussually, one muscle in the pair bends part of the body.the other muscle straightens part of the body.
Muscles work in pairs, so they must be equally strong to work together the right way. If strength is unbalanced, muscles may not properly work together.
No, cardiac muscles do not work in pairs. They are arranged in a network within the heart and work together in a coordinated manner to contract and pump blood throughout the body. The contraction of cardiac muscles is regulated by electrical signals from the heart's pacemaker cells.
they are called antagonistic muscles.
They are the muscles. Muscles contract in pairs to move the parts across the joint. One muscle contract with more power. The opposite muscle contracts with less power and get stretched over to allow the first muscle to act.
Skeletal muscles work in pairs: flexors and extensors
Muscles move body parts by contracting and then relaxing. Your muscles can pull bones, but they can't push them back to their original position. So they work in pairs of flexors and extensors. The flexor contracts to bend a limb at a joint.