Do not submerge the victim in cold water. This can actually cause additional problems. You can however use cool (not cold) compresses. Many emergency rooms use cool milk compresses. The milk creates a protein film that will ease the pain.
Put cold ice, or warm water, and it will hurt less whe you pluck. Enjoy! and hope this helps/
It's possible. Perhaps with 24 drinks of icy cold water at 0.5 liters. (Burns calories to warm up the water you just drank.) .
Water is at its greatest density at 4 oC.
Not all sensitivity is the same; if the skin has been burned it will feel better in cold water, and it is has been frostbitten, it will feel better in hot water. Too much heat or too much cold is going to be painful. Try mildly warm water instead.
Warm water is less dense than cold water, so it sits on top of the cold water. This is because warm water molecules are more spread out and have less mass per unit volume compared to cold water molecules, causing warm water to be less dense and float on top of the denser cold water.
True... warm water is less dense than cold water.
Cold water has a higher density than warm water, which causes it to have less volume for the same mass. This is because the molecules are closer together in cold water, making it more compact.
cold air because when the temperature drops hot air rises and cold air comes to ground level,cold water and hot water have the same density.
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Warm water tends to stay on top of cold water because it is less dense. When water is heated, the molecules move farther apart, making warm water less dense than cold water. This difference in density causes warm water to float on top of cold water.
Hot water is less dense than cold water, which means it displaces less water and therefore produces less upthrust. The buoyant force of hot water is weaker compared to cold water because of its lower density.