Incidentally, that chill is also why the 'low battery' alarms on smoke detectors tend to vexingly wake you up in the middle of the night, rather than conveniently running out in the 16 hours a day you're awake, which you might expect to happen twice as often. No, it's not just a bias that causes you to remember waking up to smoke alarm low battery chirps but not hearing them in the daytime, the electrochemical reaction in the batteries happens more readily at higher temperatures. It's a different chemistry, but the same reason a lead acid car battery has a hard time turning a starter in the dead of winter. The sensors in the smoke alarm always draw the same few microamps of current, but when it's coldest in the middle of the night, the battery is less able to meet the demand, and wakes you from your sleep.