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The absolute best way to lose a significant amount of body fat is to stop drinking pop all together. As well as work out to make yourself sweat.
It has very little to do with how much "weight" you lose, it's strictly how much fat you lose to drop bmi. You could lose 5 lbs and remain at the same bmi if all you lose is water and muscle. Dropping bmi takes a calculated and delibrate diet and exercise routine. If you are 142 lbs and are at 10 percent, then that means you have approx 14lbs of fat on your body. If your goal is to drop 3 points, then you simply figure out what 7 percent of 142 is....approx 10. So if you were to drop about 4 pounds of fat while keeping your overall weight at 142 you should find yourself at 7 percent.
yes,because an insulator blocks heat
Body heat escapes from all of your body. It escapes more in places where we sweat more often, such as the armpits and forehead. It escapes when we blush as the blood is closer to the surface of the skin so heat can escape easier.
The way all other mammals do.
The quickest way to lose body fat is to cut out all carbs and sugary foods and replace them with fresh fruit, eggs, chicken, fish and vegetables. Have oats or weetbix for breakfast with fresh fruit and drink plenty of water and green tea. Remember losing weight is 80 percent diet, 20 percent excercise.
That is the good question! You have the liver. Which is main organ of metabolism. It get about 20 percent of the total cardiac out put. Then you have the brain. which gets about 16 percent of the cardiac out put. Together these organs can be called as heat chambers of the body. Kidneys get about 25 percent of the cardiac out put. But most of the blood if filtered and absorbed back. But still kidneys can be added to this list. Kidneys are metabolically quite active. This is all for the resting body. During strenuous exercise the cardiac out put increases five fold and almost 80 percent blood supply is diverted to your muscles. At that time the muscles generate lot of heat. To call them 'the chamber' or not is the question mark.
that just depends on what the temperature is, what you are wearing, and if there is snow or sleet on the ground/falling.Answer:The body gives off all the heat it creates at a rate that keeps the body at a temperature of 37oC. In colder air or water the body produces a greater amount of heat to compensate for the rapid loss. From TV detective shows you know that the body continues to lose heat after death at a constant rate until it reaches the ambient temperature.
The material of the body and its specific heat capacity, its mass, the temperature difference between the body and its surroundings, and the duration of heat exposure all affect the amount of heat a body will store.
NO
The remaining 60 percent of the energy is released as heat during the breakdown of glucose. This heat is a byproduct of the cellular respiration process that generates ATP. Since cells cannot capture all the energy as ATP, some of it is lost as heat, which helps to maintain the body temperature.