The diaphragm.
the lungs and the diaphragm
It helps the air to be taken in & pushes into the lungs
During inhalation, the diaphragm contracts and moves downward, allowing the lungs to expand and fill with air. This creates a vacuum in the chest cavity, drawing air into the lungs. During exhalation, the diaphragm relaxes and moves upward, forcing air out of the lungs.
The diaphragm, intercostal muscles, and lungs work together to help you breathe. The diaphragm moves down, the intercostal muscles expand the rib cage, and the lungs expand to take in air for oxygenation.
by taking in air
lungs
The diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle located beneath the lungs that contracts and relaxes to help with breathing. Contraction of the diaphragm flattens its shape, which increases the space in the chest cavity and allows the lungs to expand and fill with air. Relaxation of the diaphragm causes it to return to its dome shape, which decreases the space in the chest cavity and helps push air out of the lungs.
The nose, nasal cavity, epiglottis, larynx, trachea, and the left & right bronchus.
The key to this is practice practice and more practice. Work on breathing from the diaphragm, feeling the whole of your lungs filling with air with each breath and consciously rationing how much breath you allow out. Work on playing longer phrases over a series of weeks. The diaphragm is a muscle like any other, repeated exercise will help build strength and stamina.
Diaphragm, abdonimal muscles, and internal intercostal muscles (muscles in between the ribs) work together to exhale push air out of the lungs to inflate a balloon. The face muscles that allow enable the air to be effectively blown into a balloon are the buccinator muscles and orbicularis oris
The respiratory system contains organs such as the lungs, trachea, bronchi, and diaphragm that bring air into and out of the body. These structures work together to facilitate the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the body.