Yes, I am happy to help you, but if you know that just asking this, people earn points practically free.
Answer:
shivering
hair on the body standing up
goosebump forming
Explanation:
The processes that help the body warm-up from the available options include <em>the shivering of the body</em>, <em>formation of goosebumps on the skin</em>, and <em>the standing up of hairs on the body.</em>
When the temperature of the body falls below the setpoint or the environment is cold, a homeostatic response is triggered and a signal is sent from the control center to the muscles of the body. <u>The muscles start shaking in order to generate heat to raise the temperature of the body</u>. At the same time, <u>the tiny muscles at the base of the hairs on the skin contract and pull the hairs erect, causing goosebumps in the process.</u>
Lack of cell walls no chloroplasts...hoped that helped
Answer:
The valence shell has higher energy than other occupied shells
Explanation:
According to Bohr's model of the atom, he suggested that the extranuclear part consists of electrons in specific spherical orbits around the nucleus.
His model suggests that the electron can move round the nucleus in certain permissible orbits or energy levels. The ground state is the lowest energy state available to the electron. The excited state is any level higher than the ground state.
The valence electrons are in the outermost shell of an atom. These electrons are of the highest energy levels in the atom
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