Humans are warm blooded, radiating at least 100 watts of heat, even at rest, which allows for faster metabolism, and a wider range of habitable environments. This advantage when temperatures are cool, becomes problematic as things heat up. Our biological reaction is to sweat, cooling the skin by evaporation. However, sweat can only evaporate if the air around it can absorb more water. Relative humidity compares how much water is in the air to the maximum capacity at that temperature. A thermometer wrapped in a water-soaked cloth give “wet bulb temperature”, the lowest temperature that can be reached by evaporation under current conditions. At 100 percent relative humidity, the wet-bulb
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