Muscle activity produces heat so that exercise creates a heat surplus that can actually be fatal. In response to exercise the body has to redirect blood flow to the skin to facilitate heat transfer out of the body.
Alcoholic fermentation involves the actions of enzymes. Enzymes function properly within their optimal temperature range. An increase or decrease in temperature can denature the enzymes, causing them not to function.
Drugs, chemicals, temperature, and light.
diet and exercise affect the skeletal system by making your bones stronger and making you more supple.
skeletal
yes
Temperature does affect enzymatic function - temperature affects the "active site" of the enzyme and so the substrate cannot bind to it anymore (process is called denaturation)
Conditions such as temperature, pH, substrate concentration, and enzyme concentration can affect the function of enzymes. High temperatures can denature enzymes, extremes in pH can alter their structure, low substrate concentration can slow down reaction rates, and low enzyme concentration can limit the rate of reaction.
Temperature, pH, solute concentration, and salt content just to name a few. Temperature and Ph affect the function of enzymes because our body has a temperature of around 37 degrees and the conditions in our stomach are acidic. So9f or the enzyme to work properly then the working condidtions have to be at least 37 degrees and they need to acidic otherwise the enzyme won't work properly.
All exercise effects the skeletal system. Your bones move when you exercise.
Yes, enzyme function is dependent on physical and chemical environmental factors such as pH and temperature. Enzymes have an optimal pH and temperature at which they function most efficiently, and deviations from these conditions can affect their activity and efficiency. Extreme pH or temperature can denature enzymes, leading to loss of function.
ya
it weakens the bones