I hope it would still be between 97 and 99 F; you're not cold blooded after all. Your body would just be working harder to keep it there.
Nothing much will happen.
The world's highest recorded air temperature is officially recognized by the World Meteorological Organization as 134°F (57.6°C) recorded at Death Valley, California, USA on 10 July 1913.
If the temperature is 41.1 centigrade, the equivalent would be 105.98 Fahrenheit. If this is in reference to a person's body temperature, it would be considered extremely high.
The outside temperature affects the body temperature because it the body temperature will try to regulate itself. For example, if the temperature outside is cold, the body will generate heat as much as possible to maintain a core temperature.
Blue
The hottest temperature recorded on Mars was about 70 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius) near the equator during the daytime. However, temperatures can vary widely across the planet, with some regions experiencing much colder temperatures.
It would be based almost entirely on the temperature of the fire.
By putting on a wool jumper, a person's body temperature may increase less than a degree to two or three degrees. A person's average body temperature would increase because the heat that usually escapes from the body is being captured by the wool of the jumper.
There is very little change in the temperature.
This is the hottest tempteture recorded on earth since records began - 136F or 57.8C in libya. But in the olden days before people the world was much hotter, especially if we go back to when the earth was formed.
No, you would not, because the Sun's rays would heat you up. The temperature you would reach depends on how much of that heat is absorbed and how much is re-radiated, so it depends entirely on the nature of the body at that point. It's impossible to give space a temperature anywhere, because there is nothing in a piece of space that could possess temperature.
37 c