the right side
Body temperature.
no
Rubing hands creates friction due to which heat is produced and you feel warmth; the same reason your body shivers when you are cold, the extra movement creats heat for your body.
Heat is produced when energy is converted, in one of many ways, from one form to another. Electric heaters convert electricity to heat; rubbing your hands together (friction) converts kinetic energy to heat, fire (exothermic reactions) convert chemical energy to heat, and so on.
depends how cold it is. as the temperature decreases the body take more drastic measures to gain heat. first, hair all over you body stand on end in a hope of trapping heat between them. which is called goosebumps. if that doesn't work the body will shiver to try to get warm. in colder temperatures the body will try to protectthe vital organs by trying to save all the body heat for them. heat will slowly leave from your arms and legs, even causing them to get frostbitten.
About 75% of heat is generated in the shear zone
"friction"
Thermoregulation
Body heat is produced within your cells. For one, when you exercise the chemical energy used in the muscles contracting is not efficiently turned into mechanical energy and the excess is lost as heat. The various metabolic reactions occurring withing your body also produce heat such as the breakdown of chemicals within your cells. There really is no one place where body heat is produced. Hope this helps!
all
It is produced by clothing such as sweaters, blankets, etc. Thermal energy is produced by the body in reaponse to heat.
It is produced by clothing such as sweaters, blankets, etc. Thermal energy is produced by the body in reaponse to heat.
There are two sources by which heat is produced in our body.Endogenous sources and Exogenous sources.Endogenous sources heat by our metabolic and muscle activity. Exogenous sources heat when the environmental temperature exceeds our body temperature and that is transferred to our body.
Forever. No cell action = no heat produced.
Energy balance can be described by this equation : Energy intake = internal heat produced + external work + energy stored.
Making heat, or thermogenesis, is actually a side effect of cellular metabolism. As energy is produced, heat is released as a byproduct of the chemical reactions of energy production. Heat can also be produced on a larger scale by shivering (or rapid contraction and relaxation) of the muscles.
70-9-%
Magnets maintain a balance between temperature and domains and when that balance is disrupted, the magnetic properties are affected. Heat results in the lessening or loss of magnetism.
I think we each emit 100 Watts,the majority from our head.