yeah if you go fast or for extended amounts of time or the area your going at it in is pretty warm its normal.
i know from personal experience
Your body is trying to cool itself down to its normal body temperature.
so that sweat dripping down hour back is obsorbed by the hairs
No, they are just worn for leg sweat to keep from dripping down into your socks and they are worn for some flair and style.
Eyebrows protect the eyes from dust, sweat, and other foreign particles. The hair on your brow blocks sweat, water and dirt from dripping down from the forehead and irritating the eye.
The blazing sun blasted my face with heat, parching my lips and sending sweat dripping down my face, as i stepped into the scorching afternoon.
During physical activity, the body produces sweat to cool down. Sweat evaporates from the skin when the heat from the body causes the sweat to turn into vapor, which then dissipates into the air. This process helps regulate body temperature during exercise.
Water dripping from a furnace's PVC exhaust pipe can be caused by condensation forming inside the pipe as the hot exhaust gases cool down. This is a normal occurrence and is usually not a cause for concern.
After a race, your body is still working to cool down and regulate your temperature, even though you're no longer exerting yourself. During the race, sweat helps cool your body during exercise, but after the race, your body continues to produce sweat to help bring your temperature back to normal. Additionally, factors such as adrenaline levels dropping and body temperature regulating can cause increased sweating post-race.
It probably means one or more of the following: You are too hot. You are working very hard and this is to be expected. You are exerting yourself too much and this is a sign you should slow down. You might need to attend to personal hygiene.
Evaporative heat loss is the process by which heat is transferred from the body to the surrounding environment through the evaporation of sweat on the skin's surface. As sweat evaporates, it absorbs heat from the body, helping to cool it down. This is an important mechanism for maintaining normal body temperature during exercise or in hot environments.
The skin, particularly through its sweat glands, plays a crucial role in maintaining normal body temperature. When the body heats up, sweat is produced and evaporates from the skin's surface, which helps cool the body down. This process of evaporative cooling is essential for regulating temperature, especially during physical activity or in hot environments.
I've never actually seen one with sweat dripping down it's forehead but I can tell you they control body heat by a number of ways: 1. Taking frequent baths and not completely drying off their feathers after a swim. 2. Sitting in the shade. 3. Drinking plenty of water on a hot day. 4. Plucking down from their bodies during a hot spell. I did see one goose almost pass out from heat exhaustion, but luckly his buddies got him into the water just in time.