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Meteorologists use two main indices to determine how air feels
to human skin – the heat index, and the wind chill. The heat
index accounts for the decreasing ability of the body to
dissipate heat as the relative humidity increases. The wind
chill accounts for the increasing ability of the body to
dissipate heat as the wind speed increases. Various combinations
of air temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed produce an
“apparent” temperature which has an effect on the body’s rate of
heat loss.
These indices imply that all humans feel the same level of
discomfort under the same combinations of air temperature and
relative humidity, or air temperature and wind speed. However,
this conclusion is relative. Lifelong residents of the Gulf
Coast states, for instance, will feel comfortable at
considerably higher heat and humidity combinations than lifelong
residents of Alaska. Exercise and solar exposure, which add to
the heat load on the body, are not considered by the indices;
nor are the health of the individual, mental state, age, or body
size.
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To
understand how the human body perceives (and responds) to
discomfort, both physiologically and behaviorally, we must look
at natural processes - namely, the reaction processes of
heat production within the body - and action processes of
heat exchange between the body and its surroundings.
One
of the natural processes that affect the apparent temperature to
humans include the size of the individual human. Body size
regulates volume heat production within the body. The more
overweight the person, the greater the number of heat-generating
cells versus the surface area from which heat is exchanged with
its surroundings. For example, overweight individuals have a
large surface-to-volume ratio, and thus retain more heat than
underweight individuals.
The type of body part affected also regulates volume heat
production, although in lesser ways. Body parts characterized
by a large exposed surface-to-volume ratio (such as fingers,
ears, the nose, and toes), will lose heat more quickly –
especially with the loss being accelerated under cold air
temperatures and high wind speeds.
Behavioral responses also assist in recovering a body back to
isothermal equilibrium. Examples of behavioral responses
include a dip in the swimming pool, fanning the body, consuming
beverages, and shedding or adding clothes.
The action processes of surface heat exchange include how
the human body responds or reacts to the surrounding air
temperatures. The human body senses surrounding air
temperatures through the processes of surface heat exchange,
including radiational cooling and/or heating, sensible heat loss
and/or gain, and evaporational cooling. On a sunny day, exposed
skin absorbs direct and diffuse insolation, converting the
incoming solar radiation to heat. This radiational heating of
the body typically exceeds the radiational cooling of the body,
and thus the human body heats up. Just standing in the sun can
cause the core temperature to warm as much as 8 degrees Celsius
(46 degrees Fahrenheit). On the other hand, at night, only
radiational cooling of the body exists. The warmer body emits
more heat to the cooler surroundings than it absorbs, and thus
the body cools off.
If the core temperature continues to warm, another physiological
response may also be activated - sweating. Evaporational
cooling is more effective than accelerated sensible heat loss in
cooling the body. However, if the air is humid, evaporational
cooling is decelerated. In general, at air temperatures above
25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit), people feel more
comfortable when the air is dry than when the air is humid.
Contrary to popular belief, not all temperature-related
fatalities are associated with extended periods of extreme
weather (hot or cold). Sometimes, people find themselves
ill-prepared to cope with deteriorating, but not necessarily
life-threatening, weather. Public awareness of the health
hazards will reduce the fatalities associated with this
ill-preparedness. Both heat and wind chill indices are a means
of guiding the public, and possibly saving their lives. |