To examine the relationship between sleep and brain temperature in the rat, the vigilance states, spectral power density of the electroencephalogram (EEG), hypothalamic temperature (T-hy), and cortical temperature (T-cr) were recorded for 3 days. A 1-day rise of ambient temperature from 23 to 30 degrees C did not affect the percentage of waking, non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS), and rapid eye movement sleep (REMS), but increased EEG slow-wave activity in NREMS in the 12-h dark period. T-hy was invariably higher than T-cr, but at 30 degrees C the difference diminished because of a rise in T-cr. In contrast to T-cr, T-hy was only slightly increased at 30 degrees C and only during sleep and in the dark period. Although the temperatures changed largely in parallel at vigilance state transitions, T-cr rose more rapidly than T-hy at NREMS-REMS transitions and more slowly at NREMS-waking transitions. T-hy declined more rapidly than T-cr at waking-NREMS transitions and more slowly at REMS-NREMS transitions. The results are consistent with a central role of the hypothalamus in the activation and deactivation of the waking state.