Our bodies have an internal "thermostat" that keeps our temperature stable so that our family can process nutrients and keep us alive.
Temperature does not typically change solely based on longitude. Temperature is primarily influenced by factors such as altitude, latitude, proximity to bodies of water or mountains, and prevailing wind patterns. While longitude can indirectly affect temperature through these factors, it is not a direct cause of temperature change.
Thermal shock is a result of parts of an object that incurs damage from a sudden temperature change. People can also have thermal shock in their bodies as a result of sudden temperature change.
If you mean to ask if cold bodies of water are associated with high or low atmospheric pressure, they aren't. Atmospheric pressure can change independently of the temperature of bodies of water.
Water has a large specific heat. That means that it takes more heat energy to change the temperature of water than it does to change the temp of land; thus places near large bodies of water are warmer in winter and cooler in summer.
98.6 F
98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
It needs the human bodies temperature to survive.
Mass does not change with temperature
Change in temperature = New temperature minus Old temperature.
If a hot body contacts a cold body, heat is lost to the cold body until both bodies reach the same temperature (reach equilibrium) after which, the two bodies cool down at the same rate.If two bodies of the same temperature come in contact, they would cool down together, as there is no difference in their initial temperature and their temperature is already in equilibrium.
Around 70
how do objects change temperature