true
Actually you have that backwards, blood is warmer than normal skin temperature. If the blood vessels in the skin dilate more blood will arrive at the skin making it hotter (and redder) than normal.
No. Skin does not sense temperature. Nerve endings in skin sense temperature.
106 f. why would you want to know that, anyway?!
Normal skin temperature ranges between 32-35.5°C (90-95°F), varying based on environmental factors. The condition of human skin is typically smooth, dry, and intact, with even pigmentation. Any deviation from these norms may signal an underlying health issue.
The normal response of the integumentary system to an increase in body temperature is to dilate blood vessels in the skin (vasodilation), allowing more blood to flow near the surface of the skin. This helps to release heat from the body through the process of radiation, thereby cooling the body down. Sweat glands also become active, producing sweat that evaporates and helps to further lower body temperature.
Bumping the temperature up while showering may affect few people's skin specially those who are temperature sensitive. Once heated up the body may find it hard to adjust back to normal temperature which may result to sweating profusely after a shower.
Usually a normal office temperature is a normal room temperature of 72 degrees Fahrenheit.
Another name for normal body temperature is core body temperature.
The temperature at which skin freezes is -78degrees centigrade.
A deer has a normal body temperature that is higher than that of a human. The normal body temperature of a deer is 101.1
No material has a "normal temperature"; materials tend to assume the temperature of their surroundings.