Absolutely, some electronics give off a great deal of heat. Just the computers in our office require air conditioning well into the winter heating season.
Yes.
Enough of it could put you to sleep permanently.
You could get grouchy youll be tired of the remainder of the day.
A solar eclipse does not directly affect electronics, as the amount of sunlight reaching Earth's surface is reduced but not completely blocked. However, sudden changes in light levels during an eclipse could potentially trigger certain automatic systems in electronic devices, like street lights or solar panels, but this impact is generally minimal.
Ambient temperature and seasonality Exposure (direct sunlight) Wind
How does the air temperature affect the absorption spectrum? Well, it is believed that in the cold or cool climates, the spectrum will get cold, therefor the water is cold. If it gets cold enough, the spectrum could and might freeze. If a plant is in a very warm or hot climate, and it gets too warm, the spectrum could get 'overwhelmed' with how much nutrients and water it has to absorb to stay alive, and it might just shrivel up, meaning, the plant could shrivel up. If you store a plant in a mild climate, it should be just fine, as long as you give it enough good soil and water.
i think, also at the time, day, temperature. i could im correct :-)
It depends on what temperature they are heated to, if hot enough they could boil. They can also evaporate.
Technically, it does, very slightly ... not enough so that you could notice it casually without precise measurement. The reason is the fact that the density of water depends slightly on its temperature.
IF THE TEMPERATURE GETS HOT ENOUGH YOU PROBABLY COULD IF IT EVER GOT THAT HOT!
The concern is that the food could get warm enough that it would start growing pathogenic microorganisms.
It doesn't! It effects pressure in the ball, so actually it could.