the ac in the car cools, the fact you have set a higher temperature than the ambient tempereature means that the car's heater is working and so is the ac, if you wish to heat up your car, turn the ac off.
Yes. It usually leaves the body at a temperature which is higher than the ambient temperature.
No. If the melting point was higher than its actual temperature then the crust would be molten.
Chilling is the reduction in temperature of the required solvent below than its wet bulb temperature while the rest is considered as cooling i.e. if we are only reducing the temperature of solvent to an extent such that the final temperature is above its wet bulb temperature than it will be considered as COOLING.
Dogs have a higher blood temperature than humans
Water cooling keeps your system cooler if you are constantly overclocking it. It does it far better than air cooling. However, the price for water cooling is higher than air cooling.
well chilled water temperature is below 40C but higher than 00C. where as cold water which we get from cooling tower is usually about 200C to 360C but below our body temperature.
Direct sunlight would heat the thermometer higher than the actual air temperature. A reading would be more accurate if taken in the shade, where the temperature reading would not be greatly different.
The measured temperature of Venus is, on average, much higher than that of earth.
Laos has a higher temperature than the UK.
I'm not sure exactly what this means. However it is possible for the temperature in some parts of the atmosphere to be higher than the surface temperature of a planet.
When high temperatures may damage a heated fluid and heating requirements are low enough that can be met by the heating media temperature. Cocurrent flow heat transfer has lower heating (or cooling) capacity than counterflow and there is a theoretical cocurrent flow temperature limit achievable which is lower in heating (or higher in cooling) than the temperature achievable in counterflow.
Since Kelvin = Centigrade + 273.15, YES - it will always be higher than the equivalent centigrade temperature.