Sentences with phrase «human body temperature as»

This seems odd because we normally think of human body temperature as a physiological optimum temperature.
For example, we think of the human body temperature as a steady 98.6 degrees, Shafer said, but actually, our body temperature changes throughout the day.

Not exact matches

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA — In the run - up to national elections on 21 August, the country's top science body, the Australian Academy of Science (AAS), has weighed in on the climate change debate with a report backing the mainstream scientific view that human - induced climate change is real and that a business - as - usual approach to carbon emissions will lead to a «catastrophic» four - to five - degree increase in average global temperatures.
Specifically, stem cell scientists at McMaster can now directly convert adult human blood cells to both central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) neurons as well as neurons in the peripheral nervous system (rest of the body) that are responsible for pain, temperature and itch perception.
Unlike a human, who averages around 98.6 as a normal body temperature, for dogs the range is different.
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.
The human temperature of 98.6 degrees and the dog temperature of 101.5 - 102 are both dependent on basal metabolic rate, just as the body temperatures of all warm - blooded animals depends on their BMR.
As the heat dome extended its oppressive tendrils over Egypt, both temperatures and humidity spiked — pushing wet bulb readings into ranges that made it difficult for humans to maintain body temperatures.
The rate levels out and then actually declines as the temperature [b] approaches or exceeds [/ b] human body temperature.
So: «Room temperature thermal energy of a molecule..................................0.04 eV So as wild guess, human body emits somewhere around billion trillion photons??
S = q / t really matters here second law... entropy is a quotient of heat and temperature and we see in localized systems that are open like a human body it can be reduced as entropy rises to the universe.
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...]
In any case, sweating is a good thing, just the body regulating temperature, a small or sometimes not - so - small reminder that we humans are too alive and not entirely dissimilar from other animal species, not disconnected from natural cycles, something everyone does so why should we care if we ourselves are doing it or others around us are, something which if we simply accepted perhaps we'd not feel the need to constantly manipulate interior temperatures, expending inordinate and unfair amounts of energy (and carbon emissions) to do so, all so that we don't let other people see us, eee gads, doing what we're meant to do as biological beings.
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