yes if its hot Yes, you still sweat in space, unless the temperature in your spacecraft or spacesuit is so low that you stop sweating, but that can be accomplished on earth too.
there sweat starts to float in the space shuttle because once the astronauts are exercising in space they would start to sweat
When astronauts sweat in space, the lack of gravity prevents the sweat from dripping off their skin. Instead, sweat accumulates as a liquid layer on the skin or evaporates into the air, which can lead to increased humidity inside the spacesuit. The body's cooling mechanism through sweat evaporation may be less effective in space due to the lack of gravity.
You have to get so concentrated till you sweat
Don't Sweat It - 2007 Transforming a Boring Backyard Patio Into an Entertaining Space with a Water Feature 8-4 was released on: USA: 15 May 2010
Sweat lodges are important in many indigenous cultures for spiritual, physical, and emotional healing. They are believed to help cleanse the body, mind, and spirit, as well as provide a space for deep introspection and connection to the natural world. Sweat lodges are also used for ceremonies, rituals, and community bonding.
They exercise for experiments back on Earth to calculate weight loss, gain, sweat things like that. How i have no idea...
I believe they recycle water from their urine and sweat and all other liquid excreted into drinking water.
Dermis can not produce the sweat. Sweat is produced by the sweat glands. They lie in the dermis.
The sweat pore is were the sweat from the sweat gland is released. The main function of sweat is temperature regulation (thermoregulation).
The homophone for "sweat" is "sweet".
Your things do have sweat glands, so yes, they can sweat.
Colour.Hippo sweat is red/orange while human sweat is colourless.