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Heat Index
The heat index (HI) is an index that combines air temperature and relative humidity, in shaded areas, as an attempt to determine the human-perceived equivalent temperature, as how hot it would feel if the humidity were some other value in the shade. The heat index was developed in 1978 by George Winterling as the "humiture" and was adopted by the USA's National Weather Service a year later. It is derived from work carried out by Robert G. Steadman. Like the wind chill index, the heat index contains assumptions about the human body mass and height, clothing, amount of physical activity, thickness of blood, sunlight and ultraviolet radiation exposure, and the wind speed. Significant deviations from these will result in heat index values which do not accurately reflect the perceived temperature.
The heat index is defined so as to equal the actual air temperature when the partial pressure of water vapor is equal to a baseline value of 1.6 kilopascals [kPa] (0.23 psi). At standard atmospheric pressure (101.325 kPa), this baseline corresponds to a dew point of 14 C (57 F) and a mixing ratio of 0.01 (10 g of water vapor per kilogram of dry air). This corresponds to an air temperature of 25 C (77 F) and relative humidity of 50% in the sea-level psychrometric chart.
27-32°C
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80-91°F
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Caution: fatigue is possible with prolonged exposure and activity. Continuing activity could result in heat cramps. |
32-41°C
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90-105°F
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Extreme caution: heat cramps and heat exhaustion are possible. Continuing activity could result in heat stroke. |
41-54°C
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105-130°F
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Danger: heat cramps and heat exhaustion are likely, heat stroke is probable with continued activity. |
Over 54C |
Over 130F |
Extreme danger: heat stroke is imminent |
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