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Heat dissipation is characterized by the ability to undergo vasodilation which increases blood flow to the periphery, resulting in evaporative heat loss. Endothermic animals are defined by their ability to utilize both vasoconstriction and vasodilation to maintain internal body temperature.
Heat dissipation is the movement of heat away from its source into the surrounding environment and this can happen by three methods, conduction, radiation and convection.
The rate of heat transfer through a sphere can be calculated using the equation Q = kAT/L, where Q is the rate of heat transfer, k is the thermal conductivity of the material, A is the surface area of the sphere, T is the temperature difference, and L is the thickness of the sphere.
Animals exchange heat with their environment through radiation, conductionsometimes aided by convectionand evaporation.
It is constantly producing heat and then dispersing it through various processes. Heat can be lost through the processes of conduction, convection, radiation, and evaporation. Conduction is the process of losing heat through physical contact with another object or body.
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Land animals often lose water from their skin, mouth, and nose by evaporation into the air. Evaporation removes heat and can act as a cooling mechanism. For instance, many mammals can activate mechanisms like sweating and panting to increase evaporative cooling in response to high body temperature.
The four modes of heat exchange between an animal and its terrestrial environment are conduction, convection, radiation and evaporation. The rates of heat transfer (watt) by all modes are proportional to the area at which the transfer takes place.
This occurs when a mammal sweats. Convection currents of air remove heat from the surface of dry skin as the air passes over it. Heat will be conducted from one surface to another during direct contact with the surfaces, such as an animal resting on a warm rock.

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