As your body starts working out your heart has to pump more blood and get more oxygen to your muscles. As your muscles burn they naturally get hot and you begin to sweat access liquid out of your body, thus creating heat.
friction generates heat
When your exercising, you start to sweat.sweat means that your body is hot. if you didn't sweat you would melt.
so, if this is possible, exercise must generate heat to you body because of keeping fit which would mean if you get hot from exercise, you probable get more body heat. kinda like when you run for 4 minutes, you get hot,sweaty, and you heart beets faster.if your heart beets very fast or slow, your body heat is more likely to be higher.if you didn't have warm blood, you wont be able to generate heat to your body.cold blooded frogs have to sit in the sun to get body heat and need to swim in water to get there body heat down.you might feel warm in the sun and cool in a pool, but that's not your body heat.
p.s. i would write more, but it's dinner time. i hope this was useful! :)
you become warmer because as you work out your heart starts ponding faster so your body works faster
it rise because the more you do the more you do the hotter and sweaty you get
Fever is different from a simple rise in body temperature because a fever always results in a rise in body temperature but such a rise is not always because of a fever. A rise in body temperature could occur because of exercise or warm weather and not just because of a fever.
Like everything else, your body isn't 100% efficient in it's conversion of energy to useful work. As you convert food to energy to do useful work, some energy is lost in the form of heat. This heat causes your temperature to rise.
Such garments interfere with the evaporation of perspiration and can cause body temperature to rise to dangerous levels.
something to do with the sulphuric acid that is in your body that makes the body temperature rise.
rise
what are the signals for a raise in a women's body temperature
273 k
As temperatures rise, the body temperatures of heterotherms also rise. This is in contrast to homeotherms, who have a constant body temperature.
No.
Yes, it rises your body temperature. If you have a fever it will rise it it a lot.
a higher temperature kills microorganisms
Slightly, but temperature will be regulated by sweating.