yes. Because same body is at different temperatures when we use different scales of temperature.
an example would be a thermometer. A thermometer because it has mercury in it. When you check a patients temperature with a thermometer ,the heat from the patients body will cause the expansion of the mercury and the mercury flows in the tube. It stops at a point and that point indicates the temperature in the patients body.
The factors of the kinetic energy of a body depend on mass of moving body.
According to studies, the best temperature for a human body is 37 degrees Celsius (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit).Further Reading:LiveScience article on body temperature
This is not possible. Heat always move from a body of high temperature to a body of low temperature.
The black body equation describes this in detail, it is called Plank's law. All bodies emit electromagnetic radiation. The hotter the body the higher the average frequency. Refer to the links in the Related links for lots of detail.
No, warm-blooded animals have a built-in heat source that maintains a relatively constant body temperature independent of the environmental temperature.
Mercury is used in thermometers because mercury is the only liquid metal in room temperature. Hence our body temperature is observed by melting the liquid metal mercury due to our body temperature.
sweat and water
Yes, a bird's body temperature can be influenced by the outside environment. Birds are warm-blooded animals, meaning they can regulate their body temperature internally. However, they can also adjust their metabolic rate and behavior to respond to changes in the surrounding temperature, helping them maintain a stable body temperature in different environments.
No body temperature is kept constant regardless of the weather by Homeostasis, which is a inbuilt mechanism in the bodies of mammals and some other animals.
Your weight would depend on not only your age, but your height, if you are male or female, and your body type (small frame, large frame etc.)
Alligators are reptilian, so yes, their body temperatures depend on the temperature of their environments.
Short answer, no. Body temperature is controlled in the body's thermoregulatory center, the hypothalamus. This center detects changes in temperature delivered from temperature receptors along the CNS. Most responses involve muscles; also connected to the CNS, and so blood isnt involved
endotherms are the animals (or whatever) that have internal metabolic means for regulating their constant body temperature . but amphibians have to keep themselves in an environment that match their body temperature. so they are ectotherms and not endotherms. they maintain their body temp. by changing their exposure to sunlight, contact with ground, and hibernation etc
The normal rectal temperature is 99.5 degrees Fahrenheit, or 35..7 degrees Celsius. However, a wide range of normal human body temperatures have been observed.
It would depend on the extent of the damage. If you question the quote from a body shop you can always get a second opinion from another shop.
no,the 7 body is longer including the frame