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  • Your body, as a warm-blooded animal, tries to keep a constant temperature (around 98°F or 37°C). Thing is, the body is constantly producing more heat (your metabolism at work…) and needs to get rid of the excess. If the air around you is at the same temperature as you are, it is very hard for heat exchange to take place (for you to get cooler as the air gets hotter) and, thus, you overheat a bit and feel warm.

    This is why wind makes you feel cooler: it moves the heated air away from your body and brings in new, cooler air, making the exchange more efficient. Evaporation takes heat away as well, hence we sweat to col ourselves down.

  • Because you need to transfer that heat somewhere.

    150 degrees F is a normal temp for a CPU, but your computer isn't gonna run well in a 150 degree room.

    • Your body produces heat.
    • Generation and removal of heat must be balanced to keep the body temperature equal.
    • Heat transfer is enabed by conduction, convection and radiation.
    • If the body temperature equals outside temperature, convection and radiative cooling is reduced
    • your body temperature rises till equilibrium is achieved
  • Keep in mind, 98f is your core temperature.

    Extremities are colder.

    This differential is critical to managing our core temperature, which is maintained by putting in more energy (running hot) and allowing processes (sweating, capillary dilation in the skin,) to cool off.

    This is much more consistent and allows us to inhabit a much greater array of environments than things that are cold blooded.

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