No, while the cold can make one more aware of a painful joint at times it wont bring on or make the affects of the disease worse.
If you are asking if a hot wire has a greater resistance than a cold wire then the answer I would say is yes. Cold wires have always had less resistance than hot wires
Your muscles quiver (shake) when they are cold. Shaking increases their temperature.
when the latitude increases the temperature decreases so, it is very cold.
Although the solubility of most substances increases with temperature (eg you can dissolve more sugar in water when it is hot than you can in the same amount of water when it is cold) with gases the solubility decreases with temperature, so that cold water will hold more gas than the same amount of hot water. As oxygen is a gas its solubility decreases as the water temperature increases.
Temperature increases as pressure increases.
as the temperature increases the solubility also increases
As temperature increases thermal energy increases.
The temperature rises.
Actually it's not weight we are dealing with here, it is actually density. So what happens is when temperature increases, the density decreases and volume increases or vice versa if the temperature decreases, the density increases and the volume decreases.
sugar dissolves faster in hot tea than in cold tea
It increases as the temperature increases.
It increases as the temperature increases.