Because your body is generating heat faster than it can lose it to the environment.
yes you always perspire; you perspire more at high temperature and high dew point so at high altitude it is likely to be cooler and less humid but you still perspire somewhat although less. You may not notice as much since if it is dry (low humidity) it will evaporate quickly.
Yes, the outside air is used to "cool" the refrigeration lines in the condenser. So the higher the outside air, the less the refrigerant is cooled down causing the units capacity to be less and less as the temperature rises.
Yes it can. The body will use a lot of energy trying to stay warm or cool. This use of energy leaves less energy for the body to perform.
less
In hot climate, your body temperature increases easily as there is less water available for perspiration. It is an attempt of the body to conserve the body water, at the expense of body temperature.
No
The job of the metabolism is to keep body temperature up, but when it's already warm the body doesn't need that much energy to maintain the body temperature. In other words, we eat less.
Warm-blooded animals.
Depending on amount of air, temperature, and humidity up to 1 week; under normal circumstances usually only 1 day or less.
it's less of a structure and more of a feature. the fact that the testicles hang outside of the body allows them to be in a cooler environment that is more ideal for sperm production this ideal temperature is around 34-35 degrees Celsius
The normal human body temperature is approximately 98.6 degrees F, which is 0.4 degrees less than ninety-nine degrees F.
The temperature of a body depends on the amount of movement of the molecules it is made of. When the molecules move about quicker the body heats up and the temperature rise. When the molecules move about less the temperature falls. Absolute zero temperature is when the molecules have stopped moving altogether.