Why does humidity make heat worse?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Sweat can't evaporate efficiently
Humid air is actually hotter — Wrong. Humidity doesn't change air temperature—thermometer reads same. Feels hotter because sweat evaporation (body's cooling) is inhibited.
Water vapor conducts heat better — Wrong. Water vapor isn't better heat conductor. High humidity feels worse because it prevents efficient sweat evaporation cooling.
Sweat can't evaporate efficiently ✓ — Correct! Evaporative cooling blocked! Humidity makes heat feel worse: (1) Body cools through sweat evaporation. (2) Evaporation requires dry air—water molecules escape into air. (3) High humidity—air already saturated with moisture. (4) Sweat can't evaporate—stays on skin. (5) No evaporation = no cooling. Heat index: combines temperature + humidity (how hot it feels). 35°C with 80% humidity feels like 50°C+! Dangerous: heat stroke risk. Dry heat (deserts): sweat evaporates instantly—better cooling despite high temperature!
More Weather & Climate questions
- Why can a small shift toward larger hail raise damage so much?
- Why model hailstone trajectories, not just thunderstorm counts?
- Why do tropical hailstorms produce smaller hail than mid-latitude ones?
- Hail has clear and cloudy bands. Why not just 'up-down elevator rides'?
- Why is the coldest storm top not the best place for hail to grow?
- Why do supercells make 5-cm hail when ordinary storms usually cannot?
