29 °C.
0c
A thermometer detects temperature by measuring the amount of heat energy present in a substance or environment.
Temperature is a measure of how hot or cold something is. It is typically measured using a thermometer, which detects the amount of heat energy present in an object or environment. The most common unit of measurement for temperature is degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit.
Short answer, no. Body temperature is controlled in the body's thermoregulatory center, the hypothalamus. This center detects changes in temperature delivered from temperature receptors along the CNS. Most responses involve muscles; also connected to the CNS, and so blood isnt involved
Thermometer
Proprioceptors
A laser thermometer is also often referred to as an infrared thermometer. An infrared thermometer detects the temperature of and object based on the amount of infrared radiation that is given off by said object by focusing the radiation.
A thermometer measures heat and cold by using a temperature scale to quantify the amount of thermal energy in an object or space. The thermometer detects the temperature by expanding or contracting in response to changes in thermal energy, providing a numerical value to indicate how hot or cold something is.
Because the name "Hong Kong" is an phonetic approximate meaning of the Cantonese word meaning "fragrant harbour". In later life, it could well mean the stench that derives from the amount of waste matter in the harbour.
Solubility (in that solvent and at that temperature).
The amount of solute that can be dissolved in a specific amount of solvent at a given temperature is its solubility.
The computer detects the amount of RAM accessible during boot. On some systems the amount of RAM is printed on the screen during boot.