The sweat is evaporating. Evaporation requires energy - heat. That energy is removed from the surface of your skin, and you feel the loss of energy as cold.
It is because your body can digest water faster than anything else. Room temperature water does not have to be cooled down or warmed up for the body to accept. If you drink cold water, your body ahs to warm it to body temperature before it can be distributed throughout the body.
Droughts are cold because air is a natural cool temperature.. in your house your temperature is normally a warm or average temperature... your body..being warm as your core body temperature, you feels droughts because the air is pushed through under your door cooling the air inside the room. It's only cold because the room is normally, nevertheless warm. Another example - if your room was freezing cold you would most probably not even feel the drought only because the room if more colder then the air behind the door. - droughts are a natural cold substance and humans core temperature does not match up to it as same with the temperature of the room. (This is my estimated answer..may need summering up)
Body temperature is regulated by an intricate system called homeostasis. If the external (outside) temperature is hotter or colder than our body then various things come into play to maintain our body heat. If you put your hand into room temperature water (room temperature is generally accepted to be 20 degrees C) then it will feel cold, because body temp is about 37 degrees C. The water will absorb heat energy from your hand, making it feel cold, until the temperature of the water and the temperature of your hand are the same. Or until you decide that shoving your hand in cool water is pointless...If you put your hand into water that is at 37 degrees C then you won't notice any temperature difference. It just feels wet. It's really weird, try it!
If it is hot humid air, the air will be filled with a lot of moisture, and your hands feel all sticky and when you breathe, the air feels thick. But when it's cold humid air, the air has less moisture and it may feel easier to breath in. But it still has the same humidity as the hot air, you just feel it different. This is because when you say the air is humid, you are basically saying that the air has moisture in it. But the air always has moisture in it, but you can feel it when there is high humidity. So when it is cold air, you feel the humidity less. Because if it is hot air, that means the sun must be out, and when the sun is out, it evaporates the sweat and moisture off your skin and goes into the air. That is why in a crowded room, we describe the air as 'stuffy' because it is filled with the body heat from all the people in the room. I hope I answered your question properly. :)
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
This is because your body temperature is different from the surrounding's temperature and it has a large difference.
A room doesnt get colder before putting on a heater or something. This may feel like it because your body will feel the warm of the heat, also it will feel the cold air. This will make you feel more colder.
We feel cold when a drop of petrol falls on our skin because, heat from our body is transferred to petrol which usually evaporates at normal room temperature when it is exposed.
Your body temperature rises above room temperature which makes you body feel cold. Animals in the desert uses the same method to keep cool
if your room or any thing like a room is cold then you have ghosts in you house
Because people give off heat.
Evaporative cooling. As the water evaporates from your body it takes with it a good deal of energy (heat) as the latent heat of vaporisation
After a dead persons' body has been embalmed, their body is usually firm and hard to the touch. It may also be cold, especially if the room that they are in is cold.
It is because your body can digest water faster than anything else. Room temperature water does not have to be cooled down or warmed up for the body to accept. If you drink cold water, your body ahs to warm it to body temperature before it can be distributed throughout the body.
You feel cold because... come on its common sense really .... The cold in the fridge or refrigerator comes out and hits you, the same when you go into a wine cellar or ice storage room you feel the cold when open door
Droughts are cold because air is a natural cool temperature.. in your house your temperature is normally a warm or average temperature... your body..being warm as your core body temperature, you feels droughts because the air is pushed through under your door cooling the air inside the room. It's only cold because the room is normally, nevertheless warm. Another example - if your room was freezing cold you would most probably not even feel the drought only because the room if more colder then the air behind the door. - droughts are a natural cold substance and humans core temperature does not match up to it as same with the temperature of the room. (This is my estimated answer..may need summering up)
our bodies always releases heat. so, when there are less people in a room, there bodies release less heat and we feel cold but when there are more people in a room there bodies release more heat and we feel warm.