• TXinTXe
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    1 year ago

    What’s a wet bulb event? (I know I can search it, but I wanted to engage here)

    • English Mobster
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      1 year ago

      When water evaporates, it has a cooling effect - this is why your body produces sweat. As the sweat evaporates, it causes your body to cool down.

      The wet-bulb temperature is the lowest temperature that can be reached as a result of water evaporating.

      When this wet-bulb temperature approaches human body temperature, then the human body cannot reduce its temperature via sweating. This causes your body to overheat and will eventually lead to death. This is true even in the shade, even with unlimited water to drink.

      At some point in the near future, it will be so hot somewhere that the wet bulb temperature will reach 35C (95F). Once this is reached, anyone exposed to that temperature will die after a few hours. The only way to avoid it is air conditioning, and if the power fails due to the heat then that won’t work either.

      This is most likely to happen somewhere tropical first, but it will slowly happen in more and more places as the Earth warms.

      • saba
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        1 year ago

        you have both enlightened me and scared the shit out of me at the same time!

      • TXinTXe
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        1 year ago

        Thanks! I think there’re places in my country (Spain) that are super close to having those kinds of events. That’s scary af

    • mrcory
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      1 year ago

      Pretty sure they mean an event where temperature and humidity combine to the point that the human body is unable to cool itself. So your body temperature would rise and if it got high enough would kill you.

      You would need some external source of cooling like cool water or air conditioning. Fans wouldn’t do any good.

      • tamagotchicowboy@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        I live in a place where this happens every other summer already, people unfortunately are so propaganda-ized or beaten they don’t care and deny climate change. This current heatwave is brutal, most buildings don’t even have ACs.

        • cycle_schumacher
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          1 year ago

          I live in India where temperatures are quite high and run slightly higher each year. I also know quite a few people who believe climate change is a hoax and post that kind of stuff on Facebook, WhatsApp etc.

          I was talking to one such relative’s father recently and he was complaining that this guy turns the air conditioner on right when he comes to visit his parents and only turns it off when he leaves weeks later.

        • explodicle
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          1 year ago

          Fortunately, revolutions are more common during heat waves.