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hatrack

(59,578 posts)
Mon May 11, 2020, 08:21 AM May 2020

35C Wet Bulb Temperatures, Lethal To Humans, Have Already Arrived, Ahead Of Schedule

Heat and humidity beyond what the human body can tolerate is emerging ahead of projections, a new study suggests. In a paper in the journal Science Advances, researchers present observational data showing that wet-bulb temperature – which incorporates measures of humidity – has in some places already exceeded 35 degrees Celsius, the point at which humans can no longer regulate body heat.

"Previous studies projected that this would happen several decades from now, but this shows it's happening right now," says lead author Colin Raymond from Columbia University, US, who worked with Columbia’s Radley Horton and Tom Matthews from Loughborough University, UK. As occurrences to date have tended to be brief and very localised, they have not been picked up by previous studies that looked at averages of heat and humidity measured over large areas and over several hours at a time, the researchers say.

For their study, they looked at hourly data from 7877 individual weather stations, allowing them to pinpoint shorter bouts affecting smaller areas. Analysing data, they found that extreme heat/humidity combinations doubled between 1979 and 2017. Repeated incidents appeared in much of India, Bangladesh and Pakistan; northwest Australia; and along the coasts of the Red Sea and Mexico's Gulf of California.

EDIT

Humans cool their bodies by sweating; water expelled through the skin removes excess body heat, and when it evaporates, it carries that heat away. The process works nicely in deserts, but less well in humid regions, where the air is already too laden with moisture to take on much more. Raymond and colleagues say prior studies have suggested that even the strongest, best-adapted people cannot carry out normal outdoor activities when the wet-bulb hits 32 degrees Celsius (equivalent to a US heat index of 132 degrees Fahrenheit). A reading of 35 – the peak briefly reached in some Persian Gulf cities – is the theoretical survivability limit.

EDIT

https://cosmosmagazine.com/climate/the-heat-we-fear-may-already-be-here

Link to original article: https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/19/eaaw1838

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Girard442

(6,065 posts)
1. I remember one particularly hot humid day.
Mon May 11, 2020, 08:29 AM
May 2020

Based on the reported temperature and the dewpoint, I'd guessed that you could open the window of your car at highway speeds and experience absolutely no cooling effect. Sure enough. It was like stepping into a hot shower.

logosoco

(3,208 posts)
2. "It's not the heat, it's the humidity"
Mon May 11, 2020, 09:37 AM
May 2020

anyone who lives in and around the St. Louis area knows this one!!!

muriel_volestrangler

(101,267 posts)
12. Old MAD magazine Dave Berg cartoon (I can't find the actual cartoon):
Thu May 14, 2020, 12:15 PM
May 2020

Sweating Man in street: "If I hear one more person say 'It's not the heat, it's the humidity,' I'm going to scream!"

Woman: "Me, too!"

Unsuspecting acquaintance: "Wow, it's hot! But they say it's not the heat, it's the humidity..."

Man and Woman: "AAAAHHHHH!!!"

Unsuspecting acquaintance, now alone: "You know, it's NOT the heat, and it's not the humidity either.

It's all that SCREAMING!"

getagrip_already

(14,618 posts)
7. amazon delivery units are troublesome, but expendable and replaceable.....
Mon May 11, 2020, 10:43 AM
May 2020

We just keep making more. They keep using them. Simple equation.

FoxNewsSucks

(10,417 posts)
8. Are you referring to the drones
Mon May 11, 2020, 10:56 AM
May 2020

or the delivery drivers? I'm pretty sure Amazon considers both "expendable and replaceable", and we do just keep making more. . .

getagrip_already

(14,618 posts)
11. I was referring to their wet capital....
Mon May 11, 2020, 12:37 PM
May 2020

Not automated infrastructure, though they do tend to protect and maintain hardware.

CCExile

(463 posts)
5. This is already summer norm in Corpus Christi, TX. And south. High humidity, little rain.
Mon May 11, 2020, 10:02 AM
May 2020

If it gets just a little worse, and our electrical grid get's just a little worse, it could be bad. Very bad.

c-rational

(2,588 posts)
10. K&R Good article and not the first time I have heard this. Made me think of the saying 'an ounce of
Mon May 11, 2020, 11:36 AM
May 2020

prevention is worth a pound of cure'. Same goes for the COVID crisis.

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