Читать книгу Weather For Dummies - John D. Cox - Страница 32

Temperature’s relative humidity

Оглавление

The United States is a funny country. Everybody east of the Rocky Mountains is very familiar with the idea of humidity, the amount of water vapor in the air, and a lot of people west of the Rockies don’t know what all the fuss is about. (Chapter 12 explains these different climates.) Out west, when the temperatures get uncomfortably high, people console themselves with the idea that “It’s a dry heat.”

When it comes to the human body’s comfort zone, the temperature of the air around it is only part of the story. A summer day when the maximum temperature hits 95 degrees in Sacramento, California, for example, is a very different experience than a summer day when it reaches 95 degrees in Chicago or Pittsburgh. In Sacramento, you might hear people remarking about the “nice weather.” In Chicago or Pittsburgh, people are starting to get the look of disaster on their faces.

The moisture of the air — the amount of water vapor it contains — is important to how you and I feel about the temperature of the air and important to how the air behaves when it comes to making weather. Moisture determines how much more water vapor it is likely to absorb through evaporation, on one hand, and how likely it is to give up water vapor through condensation, on the other. These tendencies are often measured by a property called relative humidity.

Relative humidity is a little tricky. It is expressed as a percentage, which is easy to get, well, not quite right. When weather forecasters say the relative humidity is 40 percent, for example, they are not saying that the air contains 40 percent water, or even 40 percent water vapor. Relative humidity describes the percentage of water vapor in the air in relation to the total amount of water vapor the air can contain at that temperature. The air is 40 percent along the scale between holding absolutely no water vapor (which never happens, by the way) and holding all that it can, its point of saturation, which happens a lot.

Water vapor is an invisible gas, but you see and feel the effects of the air’s relative humidity all the time. When you take a shower, for example, you’re adding so much water vapor to the air that it is quickly saturated. Condensation is producing tiny water droplets and you’re standing in a little cloud. Step out of the shower, and you might begin to feel a little chill. You are stepping into air that is less humid, and heat is leaving your wet skin through evaporation. The heat is used to convert the liquid into the water vapor that is being absorbed into the air. The bathroom mirror is fogged up because the air up against its cooler surface has fallen to its saturation point and some of its water vapor has condensed into dew.

Clouds form when air rises and cools to its point of saturation.

Relative humidity on a warm day can make all the difference in how you feel. When the relative humidity of the 95-degree air is low, it is relatively easy for the body to cool itself. Perspiration seeps through the pores in the skin, and the moisture easily evaporates into the air. Heat energy burned up in changing the water from liquid to vapor leaves the body’s temperature cooler. When the relative humidity of the 95-degree air is high, however, it really doesn’t want to take up much more water vapor, thank you, so it is much harder for the body to get rid of its heat and its perspiration. So the heat builds up, the perspiration accumulates, and the poor body, well, it just kind of stews.

Weather For Dummies

Подняться наверх