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2 yr. ago

  • An extreme value is always only extreme in relation to some baseline. For temperatures it's usually a value that departs far from the local average. With WBT it can also mean values that approach the limit of what the human physiology can handle, a value that is quite universal due to us all being of the same species. The body cannot adapt beyond the limits set by thermodynamics.

    Tropical and extreme aren't mutually exclusive. +30°C in Antarctica would be both tropical and extreme. Both are used where applicable. A temperature can also be extreme without being tropical. No matter what Trump thinks, he doesn't have the power to redefine (let alone erase) words.

    The wet bulb temp. in a proper sauna should get quite high, I don't have exact numbers but above 70°C or so (dry temp. 90°C, relative humidity 50% would translate to a WBT of 74°C). In most contexts that would be extreme, but not here.

  • *Extreme WBT's

    A wet bulb thermometer measures wet bulb temperature (WBT), which is a metric that always exists and can always be measured. It only gets bad when the WBT reaches an extreme value, as is the case for basically all environmental metrics. Saying that wet bulb temperature is lethal is like saying that temperature is lethal. Look out for temperature! I'm sorry for the rant so I'll try to keep this short, but "wet bulb" by itself in this context is an inane shorthand that lacks all the significant words and muddles the meaning of those words that are in it. Scientists talk about Extreme WBT events, because that's what they are. A less of a mouthful would be nice for science communication, but I don't want it to come at the expense of words losing meaning like that.

    Heatwave is a nice and descriptive word for one type of an extreme temperature event. Cold snap is another one. I'm glad neither is called "temperature event" because that would be dumb.

  • Nice! Altocumulus stratiformis undulatus, but with two intersecting systems of undulations. Think of them like cross waves at sea.

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    Various rules

  • Thanks! Time really is the most important ingredient. Look at enough sunsets and sunrises with an adequate camera on hand, and every now and then a great scene will come up. After that it's just point and shoot.

  • pics @lemmy.world

    Shallow fog and Cirrus at sunrise today

    pics @lemmy.world

    Condensation and diffraction

  • Thanks!

  • Thanks! Yes, it is a photo. The moth was chilling on a window after sunset. The blue dots are out of focus apron lights.

  • pics @lemmy.world

    Disillusionment

  • They sure don't tend to do that, but there are still mundane explanations for this. An unintentional collision between the satellite and another object being one of them.

    "I find it hard to believe they would use such a big satellite as an ASAT target," McDowell said.

  • Not because of Kessler syndrome, just your run of the mill space debris reentering the atmosphere and increasing the amounts of certain metals up there that contribute to ozone depletion. In other words, that may well happen even if we're lucky and avoid Kessler syndrome.

  • pics @lemmy.world

    More Aurora borealis from last week

    pics @lemmy.world

    Aurora Borealis last week

  • Almost forgot to get back to you about that last part: Yes it did, but this wasn't that.

    Here's a picture I took when the smoke was making a sunset unusually red:

  • Nah winters are beautiful up north. Sometimes also in the south, but only rarely around the southern coast.

  • You're welcome!

  • pics @lemmy.world

    Nightless nights of summer

    pics @lemmy.world

    The sunset today was quite something.

  • Thanks! That day was beautiful.

  • pics @lemmy.world

    Shallow fog and sunshine

  • The notations can be confusing, especially around noon and midnight. Is midnight am or pm when it's equally distant to both the previous and the next noon? Why does 12am not follow 11am???

    Where I live we use 12hr time in casual spoken language but pretty much always specify the time of day as well, like eight in the evening or twelve at midnight. But for anything written or even remotely formal, 24h time is used for obvious reasons.

  • Sure, but the vast majority of people live in low lying areas and even then it doesn't shift that drastically. You need to climb a mountain to see the difference when it comes to applications of daily life.

    Although now that I think about it. The same criticism applies to pretty much every definition of temperature that is based on the behaviour of matter. This also applies to Kelvin. Temperature is a property of matter and every type of matter behaves differently.

  • The thing to remember is that air is a great insulator. Air at 100°C isn't nearly as bad as say water or metal at the same temperature against the skin. In fact, the air that comes in contact with the comparatively cold human skin will cool down rapidly, forming a layer of cooler air around you and lessening the sensation of heat further.

  • 100°C is nice. And what's a steaming session? Throwing water onto the rocks for steam every now and then is just standard operating procedure.

  • Water is everywhere.

    Cooking, weather, etc. You are also water.

  • pics @lemmy.world

    The perfect weather for some surfing! No, wait a second... [OC}

    pics @lemmy.world

    Just waiting for those last stragglers to board the plane...

    pics @lemmy.world

    Great spotted woodpecker

    pics @lemmy.world

    Silhouettes on a plane

    pics @lemmy.world

    Cirrocumulus

    pics @lemmy.world

    Saw a couple of Red-throated loons this weekend in southern Finland.

    196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    Line go up, world more gooder?

    pics @lemmy.world

    I love taking pictures of planes in the soft light of a summer midnight.