Sentences with phrase «even skin temperature»

Not exact matches

As many homeless have explained to us, even though the temperature might be above freezing, being soaked to the skin on a chilly night can lower body temperature and is especially dangerous for those with health problems.
When the relative humidity is high, sweat drips off the skin so that the cooling benefit of evaporation is lost even at cooler temperatures, resulting in a build - up of body heat.
Do remember to also check your baby's skin regularly to see if he or she is too hot, even if the temperature in the room is where it should be.
With the Visiofocus thermometer, you can take your baby's temperature at first sight, as it is designed to project the body temperature reading on the forehead without even touching the skin.
Merino wool have an ability to regulate body's temperature and it is perfect even for the most sensitive skin!
It has been found that for all newborns, even very premature infants, placing them skin - to - skin on the chest of the mother or father provides superior temperature regulation to that of an incubator.
What's good about this thermometer is that when you use them, you don't have to touch your baby's skin and in fact, you can measure his / her temperature even if the baby is sleeping.
The babies held skin - to - skin also had more stable temperatures, cried less, showed less physical symptoms of pain, and were even hospitalized less with complications.
«The willful regulation of skin temperature — and, by implication, core body temperature, even when the body is being stressed with cold — is an unusual occurrence and may explain his resistance to frostbite,» said Muzik, professor of pediatrics, of neurology and of radiology.
For the first time, using sophisticated tools to measure skin color, blood flow, and temperature, researchers found that patients on the drug who had a very rapid onset of flushing — redness, pain, swelling, and heat to the face — rated the experience far more harshly than patients whose skin changed gradually, even to the point of extreme redness or change in temperature over time.
It seems unlikely that 60 min of elevated skin temperature and perspiration would be long enough for microbial growth dynamics to effect the magnitude of changes observed, given that bacterial doubling times generally exceed 20 min even in optimal conditions.
Kevin, even with greater evaporation, when one considers all the energy fluxes into and out of the ocean cool skin layer, as long as the change in net energy flux causes the cool skin to warm, the temperature gradient between the cool skin layer and the bulk ocean below it will decrease.
You know that a couple extra hours in the higher temperatures, and you may start getting a little irritable, fatigued, and even get indigestion and skin rashes.
Exfoliating is even more crucial during months with cold temperatures and harsh winds to do away with dry skin.
The water temperature is at a skin - responsive 93.5, so you can't even tell where the water ends and where you begin.
Dry heating air and cold temperatures outside make sure that my skin gets even drier.
Not even falling temperatures could keep Gigi Hadid from showing a hint of skin in her cool flared jeans and cropped tee.
Sometimes, when the temperature drops, so does the output of an enzyme called tyrosinase (which catalyzes the production of melanin and other skin pigments), causing a dark nose to lighten to brown or even a speckled pink.
Before allowing the temperature to respond, we can consider the forcing at the tropopause (TRPP) and at TOA, both reductions in net upward fluxes (though at TOA, the net upward LW flux is simply the OLR); my point is that even without direct solar heating above the tropopause, the forcing at TOA can be less than the forcing at TRPP (as explained in detail for CO2 in my 348, but in general, it is possible to bring the net upward flux at TRPP toward zero but even with saturation at TOA, the nonzero skin temperature requires some nonzero net upward flux to remain — now it just depends on what the net fluxes were before we made the changes, and whether the proportionality of forcings at TRPP and TOA is similar if the effect has not approached saturation at TRPP); the forcing at TRPP is the forcing on the surface + troposphere, which they must warm up to balance, while the forcing difference between TOA and TRPP is the forcing on the stratosphere; if the forcing at TRPP is larger than at TOA, the stratosphere must cool, reducing outward fluxes from the stratosphere by the same total amount as the difference in forcings between TRPP and TOA.
Since the assumption in the original post seems to be that the ocean is warmer than the atmosphere, it would be nice to state this at the beginning, even before explaining skin temperatures and gradients.
A stronger wind would I imagine cause more evaporation and cooling of the skin layer, making the skin minus bulk temperature difference even more negative.
At much longer wavelengths, given the surface temperature (which won't change much by introducing a small amount of absorption), the skin temperature would only be a bit more than half of the surface temperature (example: for a surface temperature of 250 K and a small amount of atmospheric absorption at 200 microns, the skin temperature would be about 56 % of the surface temperature), which could be less than the temperature even at TOA.
At RC (sorry for the biased source — I disagree with some of the reasoning in their post), you can see how the little the TEMPERATURE DIFFERENCE between the skin layer and the water below varies with 100 W / m ^ 2 changes in DLR, even when sunlight is present.
If human body lice studies are confirmed as indicating that not a single human wore clothing, not even animal skins, as recently as 169,000 years ago, then the average temperature globally must have been considerably warmer than it is now in African latitudes where most of us may have been located in those days.
Re # 2: [If human body lice studies are confirmed as indicating that not a single human wore clothing, not even animal skins, as recently as 169,000 years ago, then the average temperature globally must have been considerably warmer...]
Thermo even corrects biases from skin heat loss and ambient temperature for more accuracy.
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