Want this question answered?
It can reach 2.5 liters per hour, and higher, under very high humidity and temperature with strenuous exercise; it is VERY DANGEROUS as heatstroke would be imminent and lots of water would need to be consumed.
It depends on a lot of things. How much you drink, sweat, bleed, if you eat foods with high water content. You are supposed to be taking in 1.5 Liters of water a day assuming you are getting 1 hour of exercise a day. Therefore you should probably urinate about 1.2 Liters a day, due to water loss from sweat.
That depends on a lot off factors such as age, size, what you are wearing, what you are doing and the heat and humidity. According to the American College of Sports Medicine athletes exerting themselves in hot environments can lose over liters per hour of fluid. 1 liter per hour is more typical of most sets of conditions.
Its not so important how much you sweat. I exercise on the treadmill with my friend, my whole body is in 15 minutes drenched in sweat, in one hour i lose around 4 pounds. My friend sweats much less and he is loosing more weight then i am. Sweat is mostly water and salt, not fat.
By sweating, your body removes some of the heat that is trapped in your body. When you sweat, water is released through the pores on your skin. The water/sweat that is on your skin contains some of the excess heat from inside your body. Eventually the sweat will evaporate or be wiped away, taking the excess heat with it.
Your body will absorb as much water as is needed up to a maximum of course. So the more intense activity you are performing, the more your body will absorb the water you are drinking to replace the fluid you are losing in sweat. Most people during intense activity can absorb about 1L per hour, and some can absorb as much as 1.5L per hour. Reference: http://www.nols.edu/wmi/articles/archive/hydration.shtml
You can have perspiration up to one liter per hour in hot summer climate. It gets evaporated. The heat required to convert the sweat into water vapor is taken from the body and the air. This process keeps the body cool to the desired temperature. But there is limit to which body can compensate. You may get heat related diseases including the sun stroke.
The pressure exerted by water has nothing to do with the number of liters, nor with time. It is only related to the height of the water column.
The hypothalamus sends a nerve signal to the sweat-producing skin glands, causing them to release about 1-2 liters of water per hour, cooling the body. The hypothalamus also causes dilation of the blood vessels of the skin, allowing more blood to flow into those areas, causing heat to be convected away from the skin surface. When body temperature falls, the sweat glands constrict and sweat production decreases.
It depends on how much water comes out of your shower head.
about 6,000 liters
An athelate can loose water by sweating is 1 liter/hour. Along with that he will loose about 3 grams of sodium chloride/hour.