Why does my house feel cold at different times of day

Some materials conduct heat/cold better than others. Stick your tongue on a metal flagpole in below freezing temps and see what happens, lol. Then try a tree trunk. Big difference.

Why doesn't this cool down the surrounding air temp? I don't know but perhaps that material isn't radiant?

Edited to add: Interesting topic for which I haven't the knowledge to answer.
 

Some materials conduct heat/cold better than others. Stick your tongue on a metal flagpole in below freezing temps and see what happens, lol. Then try a tree trunk. Big difference.

Why doesn't this cool down the surrounding air temp? I don't know but perhaps that material isn't radiant?

Edited to add: Interesting topic for which I haven't the knowledge to answer.
yes but I'm not comparing apples and oranges i'm comparing the same fruit with different times of the day if you understand..

Interior Door handles good quality metal feel warm right now at 2.30pm in the afternoon temps are at 58 degrees.....after it gets dark at around 4.30pm.. and as the evening goes on..despite the temp supposedly remaining the same, those door handles will be ''freezing'' to the touch, as will all other inanimate items in my house, leather seats , toilet seat... etc ... and me colder..so I have to then put the heating on.. .
 
those door handles will be ''freezing'' to the touch, as will all other inanimate items in my house, leather seats , toilet seat... etc
I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that those items are (mostly?) non-organic? Although real leather is. (I define "organic" as carbon based.) I have noticed the same thing, though. Just never thought about it much until now.
 

Maybe it has to do with your circadian rythem. Mornings and during the days our bodies are ramped up burning calories and creating energy, which also creates warmth. As evening comes around our body's functions start slowing down preparing for sleep. As your metabolism slows down your body pools it's warmth into the core for self preservation and blood flow is reduced to the extremities, thus a large portion of your body gets cooler.

I made all that up but since it's now on the internet it becomes truth.
 
Maybe it has to do with your circadian rythem. Mornings and during the days our bodies are ramped up burning calories and creating energy, which also creates warmth. As evening comes around our body's functions start slowing down preparing for sleep. As your metabolism slows down your body pools it's warmth into the core for self preservation and blood flow is reduced to the extremities, thus a large portion of your body gets cooler.

I made all that up but since it's now on the internet it becomes truth.
:oops::oops::oops:
 
yes but I'm not comparing apples and oranges i'm comparing the same fruit with different times of the day if you understand..

Interior Door handles good quality metal feel warm right now at 2.30pm in the afternoon temps are at 58 degrees.....after it gets dark at around 4.30pm.. and as the evening goes on..despite the temp supposedly remaining the same, those door handles will be ''freezing'' to the touch, as will all other inanimate items in my house, leather seats , toilet seat... etc ... and me colder..so I have to then put the heating on.. .
Heated toilet seats will take care of one problem.
Sooner or later you may need to turn the heat on before pipes bust.
 
I saw in another post you drink black tea all day. Do you stop drinking it late in the day? Maybe the caffeine or simply ingesting warm liquid all day helps keep you warm. Then if you stop drinking it in the evening that internal warmth disappears.
 
I saw in another post you drink black tea all day. Do you stop drinking it late in the day? Maybe the caffeine or simply ingesting warm liquid all day helps keep you warm. Then if you stop drinking it in the evening that internal warmth disappears.
No I literally drink it from morning until I go to bed...again even if it was that... how are the inanimate objects becoming much colder ?:unsure:
 
... how are the inanimate objects becoming much colder ?:unsure:
I am stuck on this part; it has made me think because I have noticed the same thing in my house. For example, the hollow metal doorknob on the inside bedroom door gets colder at night while the indoor temp remains constant. A hallway with no window on one side, bedroom with blackout curtains closed, on the north side of the house so no sunlight shining into that room, on the other. Interestingly, the hollow core wood door feels the same, no change like with the metal doorknob.

Therefore, I hypothesize that the material out of which that hollow doorknob is made (inorganic metal?) may be more conducive to absorbing cold from surrounding air than the hollow wooden (organic) door. Even though the air temp on both sides of this door remains the same (due to the artificial addition of heat from an added source), there is still "cold" in the air that can be absorbed/conducted, perhaps more by some objects.

I have also noted that the solid wood outside entry door with a hollow metal knob, which is exposed to extreme outside temperature changes during any 12 hour period, does almost the same thing. I have not measured the temps but the wood doesn't feel very much different, maybe just a little colder?, but that metal knob drastically changes; this is, however, easily explained by the exposure to those outside temps.

BUT...if that is the case, knowing that heat moves towards cold (I think?), then why doesn't the heat transfer on the doorknob do the opposite? Why doesn't the doorknob feel warm on the outside if the heat on the inside moves towards the cold outside? Is there such a thing as temperature "osmosis", depending on the density of the medium through which it is transferring?

I tend to think it does have to do with the material through which the cold/heat is transferring? A more solid object (less space, therefore less air, between the cells) would absorb heat/cold differently?

All of this is, by the way, blown out of the water because why does this only happen during certain times of the 24 hour day (dark vs. light?) if the ambient air temp and light remains the same, as on the bedroom door? Could it be a lunar cycle thing, similar to ocean tides? Okay, now it's starting to sound a bit crazy.

No matter why, I tend to think it has to do with the type of material. But again, the real question is the night vs day problem. Comments, @hollydolly? Anybody?
 
well I don't know about the supposition being crazy regarding lunar cycle... it's more of an explanation than I can come up with.....you're certainly experiencing the same thing as me..thanks for your input.... the only difference is my door knobs are not hollow.. my door are hollow wooden.. but the door knobs not.. the toilet seat is solid wood... the leather is covering dense foam...
 
..when the temperature remains the same.

For example. it's an overcast day... no sun coming in the windows, the temperature inside the house is 15 deg.... I;m not cold, I have layers on.. I'm fine


In about 20 minutes it will be dark.... at 4.30pm.... later in the evening , despite the temp remianing the same in the house ( no heating on )... I will be cold.. in fact so cold I'll have to add another layer, and I may have to turn a source of heating on..

Question why is it hat 15 deg during the day feels much warmer despite no sun... than 15 degrees in the evening... inside the house.

Anyone explain ?

Wind chill factor.
 
Wind chill factor.
from what ?...the house temperature remains the same.. this is the dilemma.... the temps in the morning , remain pretty much the same give or take 1 deg.. but the inanimate objects get freezing to the touch at night .. and I personally feel much colder... and have to add another layer, or put the heating on
 

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