hauntedtexan
Member
- Location
- Central TX
Here is a little weather info I needed to understand better. We are getting that horrible heat that hit Arizona a few days ago and there are differences for us in central Texas due to high humidity and high dew points. Found this helpful info in my search to understand "dew Point" from Wikipedia. Today, at 1pm CST, it is 92 degrees, dew point at 70, humidity at 50%
Warnings are out and it is like walking under water and trying to breathe. Keep cool and safe y'all... From Wikipedia:
When the air temperature is high, the human body uses the evaporation of sweat to cool down, with the cooling effect directly related to how fast the perspiration evaporates. The rate at which perspiration can evaporate depends on how much moisture is in the air and how much moisture the air can hold. If the air is already saturated with moisture, perspiration will not evaporate. The body's thermoregulation will produce perspiration in an effort to keep the body at its normal temperature even when the rate it is producing sweat exceeds the evaporation rate, so one can become coated with sweat on humid days even without generating additional body heat (such as by exercising).
Warnings are out and it is like walking under water and trying to breathe. Keep cool and safe y'all... From Wikipedia:
When the air temperature is high, the human body uses the evaporation of sweat to cool down, with the cooling effect directly related to how fast the perspiration evaporates. The rate at which perspiration can evaporate depends on how much moisture is in the air and how much moisture the air can hold. If the air is already saturated with moisture, perspiration will not evaporate. The body's thermoregulation will produce perspiration in an effort to keep the body at its normal temperature even when the rate it is producing sweat exceeds the evaporation rate, so one can become coated with sweat on humid days even without generating additional body heat (such as by exercising).
Dew point | Human perception[SUP][6][/SUP] | Relative humidity at 32 °C (90 °F) | |
---|---|---|---|
Over 26 °C | Over 80 °F | Severely high, even deadly for asthma related illnesses | 73% and higher |
24–26 °C | 75–80 °F | Extremely uncomfortable, fairly oppressive | 62–72% |
21–24 °C | 70–74 °F | Very humid, quite uncomfortable | 52–61% |
18–21 °C | 65–69 °F | Somewhat uncomfortable for most people at upper edge | 44–51% |
16–18 °C | 60–64 °F | OK for most, but all perceive the humidity at upper edge | 37–43% |
13–16 °C | 55–59 °F | Comfortable | 31–36% |
10–12 °C | 50–54 °F | Very comfortable | 26–30% |
Under 10 °C | Under 50 °F | A bit dry for some | 25% and lower |