Spyke
lemmy.ca

Normally I wouldn't make fun, but he even typed the word Celsius in his reply. It's almost like some small part of his brain was trying to throw him a clue.

174
lemmy.world

98.7 is likely close enough to boiling point that there'd surely be some bubbles. I'd expect your bubbles per minute to be more than 0.

88
marcosreply
lemmy.world

In many places around the world, it would be outright boiling. But I imagine internal organs would need a larger temperature.

19
lemmy.ca

You’d be fine. Your blood wouldn’t even be boiling yet.

80

You’re clearly not under enough pressure. Maybe a gambling addiction would help.

68

Fair point but they aren’t exactly hermetically sealed either. I’d expect a lower atmospheric pressure to impose a stronger gradient between skin and vessels. Like if you can get the bends from ascending from depth too quickly, shouldn’t something happen in this case too?

7
jetreply
hackertalks.com

98.7K - ice cold

98.7F - a-ok

98.7C - first degree burns for your first responders

49
Nougatreply
fedia.io

98.7 KFC FOR ALL YOUR FAVORITE SOUTHERN FRIED ROCK WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI!

55

KFC! OMG I GET IT NOW!!!

First it's frozen, then it's thawed, then it's extra crispy!!!

17
lemmy.dbzer0.com

(Psst, you need another letter! It would indeed be west of the Mississippi though, east of the Mississippi start with W. Fuck I'm a nerd!)

6

Somebody alert the KGB(-FM San Diego) Arcane slime can't take a joke.

2
lemmy.world

If your ice is 98.7 K it would be Ice Ic with a different crystalline structure. It would probably taste like intense hot sauce turning your tongue black and causing it to fall out of your frostbitten mouth because you tried to lick Ice Ic you daft bastard.

14
slrpnk.net

So…technically correct. The best kind of correct.

Also, who licks ice? Ice cream, sure. Ice pops, absolutely. But just ice? Give us some wild description of what ice Ic would do in a glass when room temp water or soda was poured on it.

6
lemmy.ml

In a Sauna it can be 98ºC, not the same extern temperature and body temperature. You'll die when your body temperature is over 42ºC, but you can support way higher extern temperatures (for a certain time)

27

Most also less, but it also can get higher. Always important the preparation before and after the session a cold bath, apart of an strict time control to avoid accidents, sometimes deadly.

7
lemmy.zip

I was in one the other day that was 118. My first time being in one so hot, and it was... surprising.

7
lemmy.zip

Just never been in that kind of heat before. It was oppressively hot, breathing felt heavy, and sweat was pouring out like a dripping faucet. Interesting sensations

5
lemmy.ca

Sounds like a sweat lodge. I don't know how hot they get those normally.

3

Did that at summer camp as a kid, but memories are distant so it's hard to compare. Prob similar, I vaguely remember sweating like crazy

3
boonhetreply
sopuli.xyz

Huh why do they have 105C saunas in spas then?

4

To be clear, do you stay in the sauna the entire time? Because around these parts it's common to get in, splash some water every now and then ("leil" in Estonian or "löyly" in Finnish) and then get out after like 5 min to take an ice bath. At 100+ you probably skip the water.

I bet if you stay like 15+ minutes at once it's way worse for you because your internals have more time to heat up.

10
Redexreply
lemmy.world

Holy fuck I did not know they were so hot, how does a human body even survive that for any amount of time.

7

Dry air doesn't conduct heat as well as humid air, and allows evaporative cooling through sweat

12

The term is "warm-blooded" but if the outside temp is above 37C then it'd technically be more accurate to say "cool-bloods" or something.

Endotherms vs ectotherms!

7

This must be the reason for that spontaneous human combustion people talk about

9