Suiauthon Mimetes wrote:
Supposing that happened to a human on Earth, would it be theoretically possible for his internal body temperature to permanently drop a few degrees and level out at a new, personal normal? What would happen to someone if his "normal" body temperature dropped a few degrees?
Although humans can adapt to surviving in a great variety of
outside temperatures (there are ways to treat yourself to become immune to discomfort from being cold), the
internal temperature of a human doesn't vary much. When it does, you're sick.

Hypothermia sets in at 95 degrees generally, and after too long you die. It would, in my belief, be possible for someone to adapt or train himself so that he could survive for
longer, but not forever.
As for a smaller temperature shift, it wouldn't kill you, however it deteriorates your health, according to some people. Viruses survive better in a cooler body, circulation slows, and there are a myriad of other nasty things connected to too low of a body temperature. Someone elderly or also someone with a disease like fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, diabetes, cancer, and others have a decrease in body temperature.
On the other hand, there have also been studies, or maybe just one study, I'm not sure, that might link a decrease in body temperature to longevity....

The study was done on mice, though, and the findings are still in research stage. Also, though I haven't done too much research on it, I believe the way they got the internal temperature of the mice down was to limit their calorie intake, and I think that in itself could be what made them live longer, not the lower body temperature.... * shrugs *

Don't take my word for it.