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3.7: Apparent Temperature Indices

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    9870
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    Warm-blooded (homeothermic) animals including humans generate heat internally via metabolism of the food we eat with the oxygen we breathe. But we also rely on heat transfer with the environment to help maintain an internal core temperature of about 37°C (= 98.6°F). (Our skin is normally cooler — about 33.9°C = 93°F). Heat transfer occurs both via sensible heat fluxes (temperature difference between air and our skin or lungs) and latent heat fluxes (evaporation of moisture from our lungs and of perspiration from our skin).

    The temperature we “feel” on our skin depends on the air temperature and wind speed (as they both control the bulk heat transfer between our skin and the environment) and on humidity (is it affects how rapidly perspiration evaporates to cool us).

    Define a reference state as being a person walking at speed Mo = 4.8 km h–1 through calm, moderately dry air. The actual air temperature is defined to be the temperature we “feel” for this reference state.

    The apparent temperature is the temperature of a reference state that feels the same as it does for non-reference conditions. For example, faster winds in winter make the temperature feel colder (wind chill) than the actual air temperature, while higher humidities in summer make the air feel warmer (humidex or heat index).

    3.7.1. Wind-Chill Temperature

    The wind-chill temperature index is a measure of how cold the air feels to your exposed face. The official formula, as revised in 2001 by the USA and Canada, for wind chill in °C is:

    \(\ \begin{align}T_{\text {wind chill }}=\left(a \cdot T_{\text {air}}+T_{1}\right)+\left(b \cdot T_{\text {air}}-T_{2}\right) \cdot\left(\frac{M}{M_{o}}\right)^{0.16} for\ M>M_{o}\tag{3.64a}\end{align}\)

    or

    \(\ \begin{align}T_{\text {wind chill}}=T_{\text {air}}
    \ for M \leq M_{o}\tag{3.64b}\end{align}\)

    where a = 0.62, b = 0.51, T1 = 13.1°C, and T2 = 14.6°C. M is the wind speed measured at the official anemometer height of 10 m. For M < Mo, the wind chill equals the actual air temperature. This index applies to non-rainy air.

    Figure 3.12 and Table 3-3 show that faster winds and colder temperatures make us “feel” colder. The data used to create eq. (3.64) was from volunteers in Canada who sat in refrigerated wind tunnels, wearing warm coats with only their face exposed.

    Table 3-3. The wind-chill-index temperature (°C).
    Wind Speed Actual Air Temperature (°C)
    km· h-1 m·s-1 –40 –30 –20 –10 0 10
    60 16.7 –64 –50 –36 –23 –9 5
    50 13.9 –63 –49 –35 –22 –8 6
    40 11.0 –61 –48 –34 –21 –7 6
    30 8.3 –58 –46 –33 –20 –6 7
    20 5.6 –56 –43 –31 –18 –5 8
    10 2.8 –51 –39 –27 –15 –3 9
    0 0 –40 –30 –20 –10 0 10
    Screen Shot 2020-02-08 at 2.03.10 AM.png
    Figure 3.12 For any wind speed M and actual air temperature T read the wind-chill temperature index (°C) from the curves in this graph.

    At wind chills colder than –27°C, exposed skin can freeze in 10 to 30 minutes. At wind chills colder than –48°C: WARNING, exposed skin freezes in 2 to 5 min. At wind chills colder than –55°C: DANGER, exposed skin freezes in less than 2 minutes. In this danger zone is an increased risk of frostbite (fingers, toes, ears and nose numb or white), and hypothermia (drop in core body temperature).

    3.7.2. Humidex and Heat Index

    On hot days you feel warmer than the actual air temperature when the air is more humid, but you feel cooler when the air is drier due to evaporation of your perspiration. In extremely humid cases the air is so uncomfortable that there is the danger of heat stress. Two apparent temperatures that indicate this are humidex and heat index.

    The set of equations below approximates Steadman’s temperature-humidity index of sultriness (i.e., a heat index):

    \(\ \begin{align}T_{\text {heat index}}\left(^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\right)=T_{R}+\left[T-T_{R}\right] \cdot\left(\frac{R H \cdot e_{s}}{100 \cdot e_{R}}\right)^{p}\tag{3.65a}\end{align}\)

    where eR = 1.6 kPa is reference vapor pressure, and

    \(\ \begin{align} T_{R}\left(^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\right)=0.8841 \cdot T+\left(0.19^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\right)\tag{3.65b}\end{align}\)

    \(\ \begin{align}p=\left(0.0196^{\circ} \mathrm{C}^{-1}\right) \cdot T+0.9031\tag{3.65c}\end{align}\)

    \(\ \begin{align}e_{s}(\mathrm{kPa})=0.611 \cdot \exp \left[5423\left(\frac{1}{273.15}-\frac{1}{(T+273.15)}\right)\right]\tag{3.65d}\end{align}\)

    The two input variables are T (dry bulb temperature in °C), and RH (the relative humidity, ranging from 0 for dry air to 100 for saturated air). Also, TR (°C), and p are parameters, and es is the saturation vapor pressure, discussed in the Water Vapor chapter. Eqs. (3.65) assume that you are wearing a normal amount of clothing for warm weather, are in the shade or indoors, and a gentle breeze is blowing.

    Table 3-4. Heat-index apparent temperature (°C).
    Rel. Hum.
    (%)
    Actual Air Temperature (°C)
    20 25 30 35 40 45 50
    100 21 29 41 61      
    90 21 29 39 57      
    80 21 28 37 52      
    70 20 27 35 48      
    60 20 26 34 45 62    
    50 19 25 32 41 55    
    40 19 24 30 38 49 66  
    30 19 24 29 36 44 56  
    20 18 23 28 33 40 48 59
    10 18 23 27 32 37 42 48
    0 18 22 27 31 36 40 44
    Table 3-5. Humidex apparent temperature (°C)
    Td
    (°C)
    Actual Air Temperature T (°C)
    20 25 30 35 40 45 50
    50             118
    45           96 101
    40         77 82 87
    35       62 67 72 77
    30     49 54 59 64 69
    25   37 42 47 52 57 62
    20 28 33 38 43 48 53 58
    15 24 29 34 39 44 49 54
    10 21 26 31 36 41 46 51
    5 19 24 29 34 39 44 49
    0 18 23 28 33 38 43 48
    –5 17 22 27 32 37 42 47
    –10 16 21 26 31 36 41 46

    The dividing line between feeling warmer vs. feeling cooler is highlighted with the bold, underlined heat-index temperatures in Table 3-4.

    In Canada, a humidex is defined as

    \(\ \begin{align}T_{\text {humidex}}\left(^{\circ} C\right)=T\left(^{\circ} C\right)+a \cdot(e-b)\tag{3.66a}\end{align}\)

    where T is air temperature, a = 5.555 (°C kPa–1), b = 1 kPa, and

    \(\ \begin{align}e(\mathrm{kPa})=0.611 \cdot \exp \left[5418\left(\frac{1}{273.16}-\frac{1}{\left[T_{d}\left(^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\right)+273.16\right]}\right)\right]\tag{3.66b}\end{align}\)

    Td is dew-point temperature, a humidity variable discussed in the Water Vapor chapter.

    Humidex is also an indicator of summer discomfort due to heat and humidity (Table 3-3). Values above 40°C are uncomfortable, and values above 45°C are dangerous. Heat stroke is likely for humidex ≥ 54°C. This table also shows that for dry air (Td ≤ 5°C) the air feels cooler than the actual air temperature.

    Sample Application

    Use the equations to find the heat index and humidex for an air temperature of 38°C and a relative humidity of 75% (which corresponds to a dew-point temperature of about 33°C).

    Find the Answer

    Given: T = 38°C , RH = 75% , Td = 33°C

    Find: Theat index = ? °C , Thumidex = ? °C

    For heat index, use eqs. (3.65):

    TR = 0.8841 · (38) + 0.19 = 33.8°C (3.65b)

    p = 0.0196 · (38) + 0.9031 = 1.65 (3.65c)

    es = 0.611·exp[5423·( {1/273.15} – {1/(38+273.15)})] = 6.9 kPa (3.65d)

    Theat index = 33.8 + [38–33.8]·(0.75·6.9/1.6)1.65 = 62.9°C (3.65a)

    For humidex, use eqs. (3.66):

    e = 0.611·exp[5418·( {1/273.16} – {1/(33+273.16)})] = 5.18 kPa (3.66b)

    Thumidex = 38 + 5.555·(5.18–1) = 61.2°C (3.66a)

    Check: Units are reasonable. Values agree with extrapolation of Tables 3-4 and 3-5.

    Exposition: These values are in the danger zone, meaning that people are likely to suffer heat stroke. The humidex and heat index values are nearly equal for this case.


    This page titled 3.7: Apparent Temperature Indices is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Roland Stull via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.