Why do we sweat?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: To cool body through evaporation
Skin needs to stay moisturized — Wrong. Sweat actually dries out your skin as it evaporates! Skin moisturization comes from natural oils (sebum), not sweat. Sweating is purely for cooling—the evaporation removes heat from your body.
To cool body through evaporation ✓ — Correct! Sweating is your body's air conditioning system. When body temperature rises from exercise or heat, the hypothalamus activates sweat glands. They release water onto your skin surface. As this water evaporates, it absorbs heat energy from your body, cooling you down. You have 2-4 million sweat glands that can produce up to several liters per hour!
To ward off insects — Wrong. Sweat doesn't ward off insects. It's a thermoregulatory mechanism controlled by the hypothalamus where water evaporates from skin to remove heat when body temperature rises.
More Human Biology questions
- In aging mice and humans, transcript length explained many RNA changes. What pattern appeared?
- Why do different organs in mammals show different gene activity patterns related to longevity?
- Why does calorie restriction affect different aging pathways than chronic disease in mice?
- Two people can be the same age but show different RNA-module aging. What would a module clock show?
- Aging RNA signals grouped into modules, not one score. What does a module view reveal?
- Why do different tissues in the body age at different rates?
