i think because you were in a warm shower and you are not used to how warm it is when you step out of the shower
well because if you shower with hot or warm water then ofcorse you get out and your bathroom was not cold.It just feels like it's winter when you get out.You put on the hot water and when you get out you shiver since the bathroom is not as hot as the hot water that you put on.thats why.
well because if you shower with hot or warm water then ofcorse you get out and your bathroom was not cold.It just feels like it's winter when you get out.You put on the hot water and when you get out you shiver since the bathroom is not as hot as the hot water that you put on.thats why.
When you step out of a warm shower into a bathroom, the sudden drop in temperature can trigger your body's thermoregulatory response, causing you to shiver. The warm, moist air from the shower quickly dissipates, exposing your wet skin to cooler air, which leads to heat loss. Shivering is your body's way of generating heat through muscle contractions to maintain your core temperature. Additionally, the evaporation of water from your skin can further cool you down, intensifying the shivering sensation.
Well when you are in a shower, you gotta think, you are having a constant body temperature of the water! But when you get out of the shower into a warm bathroom, you begin to shiver because even though the bathroom is warm, its a lower temperature than what your shower water was just at, which causes your temperature to somwhat drop...make sense? Water is evaporating from the body. Heat is converted into the energy needed for the process of evaporation.
Shivering when you step out of a warm shower into a cooler environment is a physiological response to temperature change. The warm water causes your body to relax and dilate blood vessels, and when exposed to cooler air, your body reacts by contracting muscles to generate heat, resulting in shivering. This response helps maintain your body's core temperature in the face of sudden temperature drops. Additionally, the contrast between the warm water and cooler air can heighten sensitivity to temperature changes, triggering the shiver reflex.
First, it's unlikely that the bathroom is warmer than the shower. Even if it was, the hot water flowing in the shower can provide a lot of heat to your skin. The water can be quite a bit warmer than the surrounding air, and the heat transfer capacity of a thin film of flowing water is very high. Once you turn the water off and step out of the shower there is strong evaporative cooling of the water on your skin. It's trying to come to equilibrium with its new surroundings, which is almost certainly much lower than a comfortable skin temperature. The temperature approached is the wet bulb temperature, which is somewhere between the dry bulb and the dew point.
True, :)
find a simile from the book shiver
The answer is "True"
shivering is said to warm your body when cold.
Yes
When we come out of water, our body is covered with water droplets. As the water droplets evaporate, heat is removed from our body as we know that evaporation causes coling thus We fell cold.....