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Dew point

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Dew on a spider web
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Dew on a spider web

The dew point or dewpoint of a given parcel of air is the temperature to which the parcel must be cooled, at constant barometric pressure, for the water vapor component to condense into water, called dew. When the dew point temperature falls below freezing it is called the frost point, instead creating frost or hoarfrost by deposition.

The graph to the right shows the maximum percentage of water vapor that can exist in air at sea level across a range of temperatures. Note that with higher temperatures the equilibrium partial pressure of water vapor increases thus more water evaporates. The behavior of water vapor does not depend on the presence of air. The formation of dew would occur at the dew point even if the only gas present were water vapor.

The dew point is associated with the relative humidity. A high relative humidity indicates that the dew point is closer to the current air temperature. If the relative humidity is 100%, the dew point will be equal to the current temperature. Given a constant dew point, when the temperature increases the relative humidity will decrease. It is for this reason that equatorial climates can have low relative humidity yet still feel uncomfortable.

Humans tend to react with discomfort to high dewpoints. Those accustomed to continental climates often begin to feel discomfort when the dew point reaches between 15 and 20 °C (59 to 68 °F). Most inhabitants of these areas will consider dewpoints above 21 °C (70 °F) to be oppressive. Some consider a dewpoint above 10 °C (50 °F) to be uncomfortable.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Here is a formula to calculate the dew point in degrees Celsius to within ±0.4 °C. It is valid for

0 °C < T < 60 °C
0.01 < RH < 1.0
0 °C < Td < 50 °C
where
T = temperature in degrees Celsius
RH = is the relative humidity as a fraction (not percent)
Td = the dew point temperature to be calculated
The formula is:

[T_d = \frac ]
where
[\gamma(T,RH) = \frac + \ln RH]
and
a = 17.27
b = 237.7 °C
ln is the natural logarithm.
For a derivation of the above formula as well as an error estimation of it, see e.g. [link].

See also

Meteorological data and variables
Dew point | Heat index | Humidex | Wind chill | Water vapor | Atmospheric pressure | Temperature | Precipitation | Wind | Clouds | Lightning | Visibility | Convection | Theta-e | CAPE | CIN Sea surface temperature | Vorticity | Pot T | Humidity

External links

 


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