thermogenesis
The scientific term for throwing up is "emesis."
genus and species
The scientific name for a water lily is Nymphaea odorata. u can also look it up on google.com
The scientific name for bat is Chiroptera.
The scientiffic name for krill is Meganyctiphanes Norvegica (look it up at wikipedia, the free encyclopedia if you don't believe me).
shivering warms the body up.
I believe your body is responding to the cold by shivering to warm you up.
Relaxing your body will only make you colder,and shivering is your bodies response when it is cold and is ment to warm your body up a little.There is no way shivering can make your body colder.
Shivering generates heat by increasing muscle activity, which creates friction and generates heat as a byproduct. The rapid contraction and relaxation of muscles during shivering produce heat to help warm up the body when it is cold.
The muscles shivering expel heat as a means of releasing energy thus, warming your body
Yes, infact it does. When you shiver, your body recoginzes that you are cold and conserves heat to keep you warm.
They are both examples of homeostasis, shivering generates friction between muscles and requires respiration making the body warm, while sweat gets rid of the fat, which keeps you warm, and when it evaporates it refreshes the body.
When you shiver, your body is trying to warm up because your body knows that something is cold and it is touching your skin so the pours on your skin close up and the hairs on your body stand up so it can capture heat and once your hairs go down it traps the heat making sure that your body is warm. So yes, shivering does increase your body temperature.
Sweating and shivering are examples of thermoregulation, which is the body's way of maintaining its core temperature within a narrow range to stay healthy. Sweating helps cool the body down when it's too hot, while shivering generates heat to warm up the body when it's too cold.
Likely to be because your body and muscles are working hard to keep you warm whilst you are in the cold ...(i.e. shivering) so when you actually warm up and your muscles can rest you feel tired as you have used a considerable amount of energy to keep warm
The scientific term for throwing up is "emesis."
No. Shivering is the body's defense against cold. The rapid contraction and relaxation of the muscles produces heat in the body. If you are shivering while cold and then stop even though you are still cold, that is extremely bad, and means that your body is going through hypothermia.