Yes. The freezing point is only for water. It has nothing to do with smell. Polar bears hunt through smell in temperatures well below freezing.
Believe It or not, it's actually our skin. Our skin protects our inner body, maintains our body's temperature, and gives us our sense of feeling.
It is the area where all your touch senses end up; touch, vibration, temperature, pain, body position. It is organized as a homonculous
Yes because they r used to being near hot weather and cool water
the hypothalamus produces chemicals that signal cells throughout the body to speed up their activities
Bacteria like Archaebacteria can survive in extreme temperatures but eubacteria cannot. Since Eubacteria die from the harsh temperature and Archaebacteria cannot reproduce your immune system kills all of the Archaebacteria. That is why freezing in a technical sense stops bacteria from reproducing.
not being able to feel the sensation of getting burned or freezing
"Flexible temperature" of what? You'll have to rephrase the question so that it makes sense.
No. Skin does not sense temperature. Nerve endings in skin sense temperature.
precipitation and freezing. it makes sense.
Yes, in a very general sense, freezing and melting are at 0 deg C. However, pressure comes into play and in some case of a triple point, there can be water vapor, liquid water and ice in the same system, at essentially the same temperature.
scientists say it is possibly a sense
to sense
Question does not make sense. please re-phrase so we can understand what you are trying to get across. Thanks!
..... sense water temperature?
Believe It or not, it's actually our skin. Our skin protects our inner body, maintains our body's temperature, and gives us our sense of feeling.
NO it has to do with the sense of smell
To sense electrical fields.