• Apocalypteroid@anarchist.nexus
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      18 days ago

      It’s already over dying hot. It’s the humidity that is the important factor. Scientifically it’s known as “wet bulb temperature”, which makes the teenager in me snigger, but the adult which I am terrified.

      As I understand it, it’s the temperature/humidity combination at which the human body can no longer regulate using natural mechanisms, eg sweating. Healthy human body temperature is normally ~37C, so being somewhere which is 99% air humidity and a temperature of 40C is effectively like being in a bath of 40C water. No matter how much you sweat, the humidity overrides the cooling effect of sweat evaporating. A high fever temperature is >38C, so our bodies are incredibly temperature sensitive and any significant amount of time spent at temperatures higher than this will start to cause serious health issues and eventually death.

      Thanks you for listening to my Ted talk. Sweet dreams.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        17 days ago

        It doesn’t override the cooling effect of sweat evaporating, it literally prevents sweat from evaporating altogether once you’re at 100% humidity. On the way to 100% the rate of evaporation starts slowing.

      • HaraldvonBlauzahn@feddit.org
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        17 days ago

        No matter how much you sweat, the humidity overrides the cooling effect of sweat evaporating.

        Even worse than that. A living human must have a skin temperature of no higher than about 37 ° C. When the dew point temperature is higher, this means that the humidity condenses on your cooler skin and delivers condensation heat - the opposite of the process of cooling by evaporation. You can see that in a Finnish sauna for hot, short periods (where the body core temperature is not affected because it is short).

        But the body has no means to get rid of heat. Over a longer time, you would be cooked alive. This is why high dew point temperatures are deadly and not survivable.

        See this table:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_index#Table_of_values

      • Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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        16 days ago

        I feel there will be a heat wave soon that kills many people. When the power grid fails and AC that can be run isn’t enough.

        Also, I think it’s spelled snicker. NM. I looked it up, both words have similar meanings.