Because your body slowly adapts to the heat of the water in the shower (assuming most people have hot showers), making it seem cold when you step out. If you had a cold shower, it would have the reverse affect, making the room seem warm opposed to the cold water you were just exposed to.
light pollution
You can move your body or shiver.
External:temperature falls and you shiver. Homeostasis:get your body warm!😉
The difference between a shower and a tub is the shower tends to enclosed with water that comes out of a shower head above while a tub has a faucet that pours into a large basin.
It is over 9000 in a ten minute shower
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
find a simile from the book shiver
i just was wondering when do people begin to shiver?
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.
They shiver
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.
you need only seals to break it and you need all the people in mt.shiveer to break it in 30-40 min.
That you shiver when you have fever.
Dee Shiver's birth name is Darnell Marquis Shiver.
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.
Arron Shiver is 6'.
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.