Multiple southern states and a few midwestern states are at “extreme threat” levels of “wet bulb temperature”.

  • snipgan@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    But that can be a big problem because humans cool themselves by sweating: the ambient heat evaporates sweat from our skin, and that keeps us from getting too hot. If the relative humidity is already near 100 percent, the air simply can’t take any more. Our sweat doesn’t get evaporated as easily, and we can’t cool down. This makes humid heat not just uncomfortable, but dangerous.

    This is why I stay in northern Michigan.