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6 answers

Yes, and no. Without seeing the article it is hard to say. The tempurature of the body is directly related to its surroundings. If it is extremely cold or extremely hot the body will try to make up for it, assumeing it is a living body.
If you can provide more info I can give you a better answer.pp

2007-11-28 14:52:32 · answer #1 · answered by ttpawpaw 7 · 0 0

This is correct.

Any body (I assume you mean a body generically, as in physics) that has no temperature (absolute zero) contains no heat. If the body contains any heat, it will have a temperature. The higher the heat content, the higher the temperature.

2007-11-28 14:58:24 · answer #2 · answered by zealot144 5 · 0 0

There is much fussing about what the term 'heat' is supposed to mean. The current usage is that heat refers to the energy that gets transferred between things via microscopic particle to particle energy transfer when they have different temperatures. To say that a body has heat within it goes against this usage. We say there is "thermal energy" in the object, not "heat."

Temperature by itself doesn't measure how much thermal energy is in a body. It tells how much kinetic energy on average each particle in the body has. If you have more particles in one body than another then you have more thermal energy in that body when both bodies are at the same temperature.

2007-11-28 15:00:40 · answer #3 · answered by Steve H 5 · 0 0

That was a horribly posed question...But I do know that people in warm temps can't quite function right in abnormally cold temps.

2007-11-28 14:51:07 · answer #4 · answered by ugh192 4 · 0 0

good

2007-11-28 14:50:34 · answer #5 · answered by nondaba 1 · 0 0

..

2007-11-28 14:48:51 · answer #6 · answered by yullllllllllllllllllllllllllllle 1 · 0 0

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