Your body continuously makes energy that keeps your body warm.
Basically, because you are not dead. Your metabolism is constantly working to one degree or another just to keep all your systems in balance and ready to go. In the long term, you must be producing or absorbing the same amount of heat that you are losing through all possible paths or you are in trouble; your temperature would either be increasing or decreasing.
Removing heat from the air will lower its temperature.
There is a thing called the "heat of compression" which causes all compressed substances to increase in temperature.
If you use a fan or some form of air circulation it will decrease the feel of the temperature though it may not decrease the actual temperature.
Removing heat from the air will lower its temperature.
altitude
Yes it does the gas law that applies here says increase in velocity = decrease in temperature and pressure.
no it increases
In the atmosphere increasing the temperature the pressure decrease.
Increase:- When water vapour condenses out of the air to form water droplets, the energy (the latent heat) in the water vapour is released into the surrounding air and the air is warmed.
Whenever you are exposed to sunlight, the portion that is absorbed becomes heat. However, under most circumstances your body is also losing heat to the surround air, as it is usually cooler than human body temperature. The lower the air temperature, the faster you lose heat to it. If the air is warm enough, then the air will cool you at a slower rate than the sun warms you. On a cold day, the air cools you faster.
noThe density decrease when the temperature increase.