The Feeling of Cold: Where Does It Come From?

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The sensation of cold arises from the absence of heat and the differential between body temperature and the surrounding environment. When exposed to cold, heat leaves the body at an uncomfortable rate, leading to the perception of coldness. For example, touching an ice cube feels cold because it draws heat away from the hand until thermal equilibrium is reached. This process is an endothermic reaction. The body must exert more effort to maintain its internal temperature in cooler environments, and nerves have evolved to detect these temperature changes. Thermoception, the sense of temperature, is primarily facilitated by skin receptors that respond to both heat and cold. Cold sensations are transmitted via Alpha D fibers, while warmth is carried by C fibers. The mechanisms of temperature perception are still being studied, highlighting the complexity of how organisms perceive thermal changes.
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Where does the feeling of cold come from? Is it from heat rushing past cells, when we step outside in the cold, that creates this feeling we signal as cold?
 
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blt93932 said:
Where does the feeling of cold come from? Is it from heat rushing past cells, when we step outside in the cold, that creates this feeling we signal as cold?

Coldness is the absense of heat and the difference between your body heat and the temperature around your body. The sensation comes from the feeling of heat leaving our body at a faster than comfortable rate. This can be an isolated or global feeling. So if you touch an ice cube it feels cold because the ice cube is drawing heat away from your hand and into the ice cube until it melts and creates an equilibrium between the temp of your hand and the ice cube. This is a laymans explanation.
 
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An endothermic reaction. So I was sort of correct with my explanation, the feeling of heat rushing past the cells and leaving the body.
 
Your body has to work harder to maintain its constant internal temperature when the environmental temperature is lower, even when there is no wind to rush past. So your nerves have evolved to be sensitive to temperature differences.

When it's hot with a wind and you sweat, the sweat evaporates, and by basic physics that cools your skin, and the nerves there sense that.
 
I would like to suggest that a "sense of temperature" is in fact a fundamental human sense, such as sight, taste, smell, etc. I would welcome other thoughts on this.
 
You're right Rade,
The feeling of heat/cold doesn't exist without a system in our body.
They are speaking about physics but there is effectivelly a transition of the physical event (cold) to a neuron firing carried by Alpha D fibres in human. Warmth is carried by C fibres.
 
I remember something about coagulating proteins that cause certain nerves to fire??
 
The wiki offers help:
Thermoception is the sense by which an organism perceives temperature. In larger animals, most thermoception is done by the skin. The details of how temperature receptors work is still being investigated. Mammals have at least two types of sensor: those that detect heat (i.e. temperatures above body temperature) and those that detect cold (i.e. temperatures below body temperature).
 
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