Degrees sex
An example of a sexual thermometer, see full size (Ѻ) ,as published in the 2010 JHT article "Hot Sex, Cold Sex, Ambient Sex" by American chemical engineer Libb Thims. [1]
In human thermodynamics, sexual thermometer is an instrument for measuring sexual heat. [1]

Overview
In 2005, American chemical engineer Libb Thims conducted a 2005 study of thirty individuals, concerning the nature of the temperature of sex, is shown adjacent, with indicator marks on the thermometer of degrees sex (˚S) of +30 (very hot sex) to -30 (very cold sex); on these results, in 2010, a verbal-scaled "sexual thermometer" was constructed, as shown adjacent. [1]

The following is the "hot sex" portion of the scale, ranked by hotness:
Hot sex (scale)

The following is the "ambient sex" portion of the scale, ranked by hotness (or ambientness):
ambient sex (scale)

The following is the "cold sex" portion of the scale, ranked by coldness:

Cold sex (scale)
(add discussion)

References
1. (a) Thims, Libb. (2010). “Hot Sex, Cold Sex, Ambient Sex” (press release), Journal of Human Thermodynamics, 6: 47-58, Jul 18.
(b) Anon, Alan. (2010). “Results of a 2005 IoHT Study on the Physics of Hot Sex, Cold Sex, and Ambient Sex Results.” NewsBlaze.com, Jul 20.
(c) Anon. (2010). “Results of a 2005 IoHT Study on the Physics of Hot Sex, Cold Sex, and Ambient Sex Released.” PR-USA.

TDics icon ns