It would go up because their heart is trained so well it can pump blood round the body with ease.
That depends on your level of fitness. If you are really out of shape, your pulse can increase rapidly. If you are more fit, your pulse can remain relatively stable for a longer period.
Your pulse increases when you do exercise. It then returns to normal when you stop. If you are doing aerobics, a cool-down period is good to fit into your routine at the end. This is a period where you gradually slow your aerobic activity over a few minutes until you come to rest. With a good over-all routine, over timeyour average rest heart rate should decrease.
Tom is very fit and a top athlete.
Fit people have a resting pulse rate of 70 or less. The less fit you are, the higher your pulse rate.
To train and get fit.
Cardiac Output is the product of Stroke Volume and Hear Rate. Increase in either one will increase in Cardiac OutPut. THe increase in HR could be due to decrease of Parasympatheic Drive, Incresae in Sympathetic Drive. (norepiphrine increase HR) Peripheral REsistance decrease because of vasodilation during exercise in the working musclse because of vasodilator metabolites (adenosine, K+) inhibit Norepinphrine release locally. I think the increase in pulse and blood pressure duing exercise is to meet the oxygen demand of the working tissue. In unfir person you can see that they acheive that mostly by increasing heart rate. However when you see the fit person doing the same workload, they might have lesser increase of HR compare to the unfit person because they have a stroger stroke volume. I hope this helps
It is not considered bad, especially if you are very fit, your pulse at rest can be low.
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The normal pulse rate for an adult is 60 to 100 beats per minute. In general, people that are physically fit have lower resting pulse rates, while people that are less physically fit tend to have a bit higher resting pulse rates.
"normal" is 72 beats per minute, but pulse rates in the 50s are not uncommon in aerobically fit men. Pulse rates in the 30s are unusual but can occur in very fit men.
It is called Auto-Fit Column width. You will find it in the cell format options. When you click on the Auto-Fit button, your column will automatically expand to allow room for the widest contents of a cell in the column.
The R-76 is NOT scopable so a Red Dot will NOT fit on it.