Not exact matches
She could easily have shaped
humans so they would have a reproductive chemistry tolerant of
normal body temperature.
Unlike a
human, who averages around 98.6 as a
normal body temperature, for dogs the range is different.
A dog's
normal body temperature is higher than
humans at 100.0 — 102.5 °F.
Famous dog trainer and expert Cesar Millan says on his website: «While the condition can affect dogs and
humans, it can affect dogs more severely both because they are generally smaller than people and because a dog's
normal body temperature is higher than ours — in fact, when a
human's
body temperature reaches what is
normal for a dog, this is called having a fever, and the high end of
normal for a dog would put a
human in the hospital.
Hypothermia — Dogs are subject to hypothermia just as
humans are, and if your dog's
temperature falls below
normal (100.5 to 102.5 degrees F) and stays there, it means your dog is unable to regulate its
body temperature and needs assistance.
[«
Humans at
normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm (micrometers)» - wiki]
And: Far infrared: 15 — 1,000 µm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrared And: «
Humans at normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm» So humans and anything cooler 98.6 F radiate some energy in the far infrared [15 — 1,00
Humans at
normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm» So
humans and anything cooler 98.6 F radiate some energy in the far infrared [15 — 1,00
humans and anything cooler 98.6 F radiate some energy in the far infrared [15 — 1,000 µm].
That
body starts at a
normal human temperature.
A
normal human sitting in a room with a measured air
temperature of 20 degrees C will have a core
body temperature of 37 degrees C.
In my experience,
normal resting
human subjects have this much variation in
body temperature over the course of a
normal day so without seeing the data, I'm skeptical.