The household air conditioner is controlled in the same way as any other air con unit. The temperature of the area to be cooled is controlled by a sensor in the inlet air side of the evaporator coil. When the air con reaches I'ts set temp, the unit will cycle on and off within two or three degrees of that set temp to maintain a constant room ambient.
if your are serious, then urine could be measured with most thermometers like the mercury (not very safe) of the normal gallium if you are looking for household ones.
this is a thermometer that can work twice as much as a normal thermometer or a thermometer that can check the temperature of two things at the same time
A temporal artery thermometer is a thermometer that gets a persons body temperature from their temple.
That is the drain for the normal condensation from the air conditioner.That is the drain for the normal condensation from the air conditioner.
A chocolate thermometer and a regular thermometer differ from each other by its size and sturdiness. The chocolate thermometer are much bigger than the regular thermometer so that it can withstand the extreme heat. The normal thermometer can withstand less heat than the other one.
The normal skin temperature is around 91-95 degrees Fahrenheit. It can be accurately measured using a thermometer, such as an infrared thermometer or a digital thermometer, by placing it on the skin's surface and waiting for a few seconds for the reading to stabilize.
That is condensation and it is normal for water to come out of an air conditioner in the back of it.
Normal body temperature, is around 36.5 on a digital thermometer.
It tells you the temperature (greenhouse; engine; person; etc.).
to bring the temperature to the normal position.
Assuming that the surroundings are above the freezing point of water - yes - it is normal for the temperature on the thermometer to go up. It may still remain elevated even if plunged back into the ice bath since the thermometer has mass and can absorb some energy while out of the bath. There is also the phenomena that in some thermometers even when the temperature drops, the thermometer fluid sometimes remains elevated unless you "shake down" the thermometer.
The normal hot water temperature for household use is typically set between 120 to 140 degrees Fahrenheit.