Title: Detecting Temperature Change
1Detecting Temperature Change
2External temperature change
- Skin is the barrier between our body and the
external environment and can be 2 or 3 degrees
below core body temp - Core body temp is maintained at about 37 degrees
C - Changes in the external temp causes changes in
the temp of exposed skin. These changes are
detected by two kinds of temp receptors - - one detects cooling
- - one detects warming
3External temperature change
- If there is a reduction in skin temp, the cold
receptors register the change by increasing the
rate of discharge of electrical information along
the affector neurons
4External temperature change
- If there is an increase in skin temperature, the
heat receptors increase their rate of discharge
along the affector neurons
5External temperature change
- The number of different kinds of temperature
receptors vary in different parts of the skin
Affector or sensory neurons transmit impulses
from skin temperature receptors to the
Hypothalamus in the brain
6Hypothalamus
The temperature control centre of the body
7Mechanism of Thermoregulation
8Hypothalamus
- The hypothalamus plays a most significant role
in the maintenance of core body temperature. - It receives information about temperature change
via sensory nerves from various parts of the body
as well as detecting temperature change itself. - The messages sent out by the hypothalamus in
response depend on whether the information is
that the temperature is higher or lower than 37C
9Draw a negative feedback loop for temperature
change
10Internal temperature change
- Changes in core body temp are detected by a
number of temp receptors within the body
The most important of these are large numbers of
temperature-sensitive receptors in the
hypothalamus of the brain. The majority of
these, ¾ of the total, are sensitive to heat, the
remaining sensitive to cold.
11Internal temperature change
- Other deep body temp receptors are near the
spinal cord, around large veins and in parts of
the digestive system. - These transmit impulses via affector neurons to
the hypothalamus.
12Maintaining Core Temperature
Ways of gaining heat Ways of losing heat
Basic metabolic processes Evaporation of sweat
Shivering Panting
Exercise or other muscular activity Convection
Radiation and conduction to the body Radiation and conduction from the body
13HEAT TRANSFER PRINCIPLES
- CONDUCTION is the transfer of energy through
matter from particle to particle. - CONVECTION is the transfer of heat by the actual
movement of the warmed matter. - RADIATION Electromagnetic waves that directly
transport ENERGY through space.
14CONDUCTION
- Conduction is the transfer of energy through
matter from particle to particle. It is the
transfer and distribution of heat energy from
atom to atom within a substance. - For example, a spoon in a cup of hot soup
becomes warmer because the heat from the soup is
conducted along the spoon. - Conduction is most effective in solids-but it
can happen in fluids. - Fun fact Have you ever noticed that metals
tend to feel cold? Believe it or not, they are
not colder! They only feel colder because they
conduct heat away from your hand. You perceive
the heat that is leaving your hand as cold.
15CONVECTION
- Convection is the transfer of heat by the actual
movement of the warmed matter. - Heat leaves the coffee cup as the currents of
steam and air rise. - Convection is the transfer of heat energy in a
gas or liquid by movement of currents. (It can
also happen is some solids, like sand.) The heat
moves with the fluid. - Consider this convection is responsible for
making macaroni rise and fall in a pot of heated
water. The warmer portions of the water are less
dense and therefore, they rise. Meanwhile, the
cooler portions of the water fall because they
are denser.
16RADIATION
- Radiation Electromagnetic waves that directly
transport ENERGY through space. - Sunlight is a form of radiation that is radiated
through space to our planet without the aid of
fluids or solids. The energy travels through
nothingness! Just think of it! The sun transfers
heat through 93 million miles of space. - Because there are no solids (like a huge spoon)
touching the sun and our planet, conduction is
not responsible for bringing heat to Earth. Since
there are no fluids (like air and water) in
space, convection is not responsible for
transferring the heat. Thus, radiation brings
heat to our planet.
17Evaporation
- Makes use of the principles of conduction,
convection and radiation. - The evaporation of water requires heat which is
provided by the body - Even if a person is not sweating, water still
evaporates from the skin
18Losing Heat
- Heat can be lost by the body through radiation,
conduction, convection and evaporation
19Gaining heat and reducing heat loss
- The hypothalamus initiates two kinds of responses
to balance any loss of heat. - Some responses generate heat, others reduce the
rate at which heat is lost from the body
20Heat production by Shivering
- Alternate contraction and relaxation of small
muscle groups involuntary - Activated by the hypothalamus
- When muscles shiver almost all the energy is
converted into heat energy - Drains energy reserves so cannot be sustained
for long
21Heat production by metabolism
- Through a process of hormone production by the
hypothalamus to the pituitary to the thyroid,
thyroxine output is increased - Thyroxine is a hormone that increases the
metabolic rate of all cells of the body,
resulting in an increase in heat production.
22Heat production by metabolism
- Motor nerves from the hypothalamus also cause
the medulla of the adrenal glands to secrete
adrenaline and noradrenaline. - These hormones increase basal metabolic rate,
particularly in skeletal muscles and brown fat
23Reducing heat loss through constriction of blood
flow in skin
- Constriction of arterioles to reduce heat loss
- Refer back to vasodilation and vasoconstriction
24Reducing heat loss through piloerection
- Hair standing on end
- Trapping a layer of air as a insulation layer
between the skin and the external environment
25Behavioural activities for temperature regulation
- List as many as you can for humans heat loss,
heat gain
In hot weather, kangaroos and wallabies often
lick their front legs. What benefit might this
behaviour produce?
Consider how a cat or dog sleeps in hot and cold
weather. How are they limiting or increasing
heat loss?
26Big or small which stays warm more easily?
- Consider both heat production and heat loss
Heat production in relation to the units of skin
surface
27Costs of Homeostasis
surface area to volume relationship heat is lost
through surfaces
as body size increases volume increases as a
power of 3 surface area increases as a power of
2
28Costs of Homeostasis
lower SA / V (big mammals) more precise
temperature regulation
less heat loss relative to thermal inertia of
organism