scientists say it is possibly a sense
Your sense of touch is subjective and not precise enough to measure temperature quantitatively. It cannot provide an accurate numerical value to represent the exact temperature of an object. Specialized instruments like thermometers are needed for quantitative temperature measurements.
A pressure sensor or transducer is used to measure the pressure of the refrigerant in a sealed system, which in turn is correlated with the temperature of the system. As temperature increases, the pressure of the refrigerant also increases, allowing the system to sense temperature changes and adjust accordingly.
The sense of temperature, known as thermoreception, allows you to feel hot and cold sensations. Specialized nerve endings in your skin detect changes in temperature and send signals to your brain to interpret these sensations.
We detect infrared radiation as heat. This form of radiation is emitted by objects due to their temperature, and our skin can sense it as warmth.
The velocity of hydrogen can vary depending on the specific conditions, such as temperature and pressure. In a broad sense, hydrogen molecules at room temperature have an average velocity of about 1.8 km/s.
No. Skin does not sense temperature. Nerve endings in skin sense temperature.
..... sense water temperature?
NO it has to do with the sense of smell
I think it is skin
The sense that concerns the vibratory sense is touch. Vibratory sense includes the feeling of pain, temperature, vibration and pressure.
The skin acts as a sense organ for temperature, detecting both hot and cold sensations through specialized receptors called thermoreceptors. These thermoreceptors send signals to the brain, allowing us to perceive and react to changes in temperature.
Gemini is an arbitrary patch of the sky. It doesn't have a "temperature" in any meaningful sense of the word.
"Flexible temperature" of what? You'll have to rephrase the question so that it makes sense.
Chemoreceptors sense chemical stimuli. Mechanoreceptors sense mechanical stimuli. Thermoreceptors sense temperature stimuli. Photoreceptors sense light stimuli. Nociceptors sense pain stimuli.
Your sense of touch is subjective and not precise enough to measure temperature quantitatively. It cannot provide an accurate numerical value to represent the exact temperature of an object. Specialized instruments like thermometers are needed for quantitative temperature measurements.
The sense of touch is used when handling something. It allows us to feel the texture, weight, temperature, and shape of objects.
A pressure sensor or transducer is used to measure the pressure of the refrigerant in a sealed system, which in turn is correlated with the temperature of the system. As temperature increases, the pressure of the refrigerant also increases, allowing the system to sense temperature changes and adjust accordingly.