because when you take a warm shower, the air in your shower is really warm, and when you come out, the air (which is at room temperature) seems really cold compared to the air in your shower, so you get goosebumbs.
"I always get the quivers when exiting the warm shower into the cold air"
The cold breeze you may feel after taking a hot shower is due to the temperature difference between the warm, humid air from the shower and the cooler air outside the bathroom. This can create a slight draft or convection current as the warm air escapes and mixes with the cooler air, causing the sensation of a cold breeze.
warm. because cold air causes ur muscles to contrast and it also doesnt take as long to warm up in warm as it would in cold
Cold air holds less moisture than warm air. When you run the shower with hot water, the moisture condenses on the cold mirror surface causing it to fog up. If you run the shower cold, the mirror will not fog up.
The warm air rises over the cold air mass, creating a boundary known as a front. This can lead to the formation of clouds, precipitation, and sometimes severe weather as the warm air is forced to cool and condense.
Because your body slowly adapts to the heat of the water in the shower (assuming most people have hot showers), making it seem cold when you step out. If you had a cold shower, it would have the reverse affect, making the room seem warm opposed to the cold water you were just exposed to.
When leaving a shower, the body is wet and the air around it is dry. Some of the body moisture starts evaporating into the drier air, removing heat from your body and making you feel cooler.
Warm air is less dense than cold air because its molecules are more spread out due to their increased energy and movement. This causes warm air to rise, as it is lighter than the denser cold air.
Warm air is lighter then cold air. So the cold air sinks and the warm air raise.
When it comes into contact with something cold (likes tiles in your bathroom when you shower) the vapour condenses into water.
When cold air moves toward warm air, it pushes the warm air upward because cold air is denser and therefore heavier than warm air. This creates a lifting mechanism known as cold air advection, which can lead to the formation of clouds and precipitation.