I've heard that the simple act of sweating does not burn calories, but I've never quite understood that. If you get hot, your body sweats in order to keep your core temperature stable, right? Well doesn't that require energy, i.e. calories?
Wouldn't this be the same physical process as drinking an ice cold glass of water? To raise 1 gram of water 1 degree celsius, you expend 1 calorie. And I'm not talking the calories used to describe energy in food, but the energy it takes to raise the temperature of water. These are two different types of calories. So to say you drink 10 8oz. glasses of water (at 0 degrees celsius) a day which equates to about 2,365 grams, raise that to a normal body temp of 37 degrees celsius and you have burned 87,505 calories. But then to convert that number to the calories we all think of and relate to weight loss, you gotta divide that by 1000 and you get 87.5.
Is this the same thing? If so, then sweating WOULD burn calories. Can somone explain?
Wouldn't this be the same physical process as drinking an ice cold glass of water? To raise 1 gram of water 1 degree celsius, you expend 1 calorie. And I'm not talking the calories used to describe energy in food, but the energy it takes to raise the temperature of water. These are two different types of calories. So to say you drink 10 8oz. glasses of water (at 0 degrees celsius) a day which equates to about 2,365 grams, raise that to a normal body temp of 37 degrees celsius and you have burned 87,505 calories. But then to convert that number to the calories we all think of and relate to weight loss, you gotta divide that by 1000 and you get 87.5.
Is this the same thing? If so, then sweating WOULD burn calories. Can somone explain?