What Is Relative Humidity? - podcast episode cover

What Is Relative Humidity?

May 17, 20195 min
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Episode description

Relative humidity can make pleasant temperatures unbearable (and vice versa). Learn why -- and what the dew point has to do with it -- in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, I'm Lauren vocal Bam. And if you've ever been in the American South on a hot August day, you're familiar with the incredible mugginess of borderline hallucinatory experience, where you feel like you're walking in a stew of your own perspiration. But there's more to understanding that clammy gross feeling than simply glancing at a weather forecaster's humidity reading.

To really get a grasp on how humidity affects your health, your home, and your sanity, you need insights on the types of humidity, as well as the concept of dew point. Humidity can be measured in several ways, but relative humidity is the most common. But in order to understand relative humidity, it's helpful to first understand absolute humidity. Absolute humidity is the mass of the water vapor divided by the mass of the dry air in a given volume of air

at a given temperature. The hotter the air is, the more water it can contain, which is why it's never quite so humid during cold winters. Relative humidity is the ratio of the current absolute humidity to the highest possible absolute humidity at the given air temperature. A reading of one percent relative humidity means that the air is totally saturated with water vapor and cannot hold anymore, creating the possibility of rain. This doesn't mean that the relative humidity

must be one in order for it to rain. It must be one percent where the clouds are forming, but the relative humidity near the ground could be much lower. Humans are very sensitive to humidity, as our skin relies on the air to get rid of moisture. The process of sweating is your body's attempt to keep cool and maintain its current temperature because evaporation uses some of the thermal energy in the air to drive the transition of liquid sweat to water vapor, making it cooler around you.

But if the air is already totally saturated at one percent relative humidity, sweat will not evaporate into the air. As a result, we feel much hotter than the actual temperature. When the relative humidity is high, your clothes may become saturated with perspiration that can't go anywhere, prompting the feeling of being a swampy bog monster of revolting proportions. If the relative humidity is low, However, we can feel much cooler than the actual temperature because our sweat evaporates, easily,

cooling us off. For example, if the air temperature is seventy five degrees fahrenheit, that's twenty four celsius and the relative humidity is zero percent, the air temperature will feel like sixty nine fahrenheit or twenty one celsius to our bodies. But if the air temperature is seventy five degrees fahrenheit and the relative humidity is one, we feel like it's

eighty degrees fahrenheit or twenty seven celsius. People tend to feel most comfortable at a relative humidity between thirty and fifty. Humidifiers and de humidifiers helped to keep indoor humidity at a comfortable level. They also vitally helped dry interior structures like drywall and lumber to prevent them from deteriorating due

to moisture and subsequent mold. If you and out doorsy person, or just particularly sensitive to that clammy damp feeling you detect outside, it's vitally important to understand the difference between relative humidity and dew point, because the latter will actually give you a better idea of just how quickly you'll become uncomfortable with any exertion, and it's perhaps more often

reported in weather forecasts. The dew point is, in short, the point at which dew droplets form on objects like grass. In other words, the temperature which a relative humidity of one is achieved. The higher the dew point, the muggier it will be, and the more uncomfortable you'll become. A dew point around fifty five is pretty comfortable, but higher than sixty five and you'll quickly realize how oppressive the

situation really is. For example, a temperature of eighty degrees fahrenheit that's twenty seven celsius and a dew point of sixty degrees fahrenheit or fifteen celsius would mean a relative humidity of fifty percent. Humidity is calculated using a formula combining vapor pressure, temperature, dew point, and other factors. That relative is a level that most people won't enjoy unless they have easy access to a nice cool air conditioner.

So when you hear a weather forecasters say it's eighty five degrees outside, but with the humidity it feels like ninety two degrees, that ninety two is a combination of the temperature and the dew point, also known as the heat index. As a rule of thumb, the closer the dew point is to the actual air temperature, the more likely it is that you'll feel like the air is uncomfortably humid. Today's episode was written by Nathan Chandler and produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is a production of

iHeart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more on this and lots of other dewey topics, visit our home planet, how stuff Works dot com. And for more podcasts for my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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