The Prague Post - The temperature the human body cannot survive

EUR -
AED 4.298411
AFN 80.848329
ALL 97.660061
AMD 448.846241
ANG 2.09445
AOA 1073.146765
ARS 1490.94381
AUD 1.79484
AWG 2.109431
AZN 1.991025
BAM 1.956002
BBD 2.362943
BDT 142.480417
BGN 1.9561
BHD 0.441151
BIF 3488.059346
BMD 1.170281
BND 1.500255
BOB 8.086833
BRL 6.51998
BSD 1.170321
BTN 101.061412
BWP 16.313681
BYN 3.829995
BYR 22937.499063
BZD 2.350842
CAD 1.599709
CDF 3377.430105
CHF 0.932836
CLF 0.029081
CLP 1115.956442
CNY 8.397888
CNH 8.396634
COP 4722.585298
CRC 590.26081
CUC 1.170281
CUP 31.012435
CVE 110.273063
CZK 24.624578
DJF 208.191448
DKK 7.466448
DOP 70.637277
DZD 151.852654
EGP 57.451067
ERN 17.554208
ETB 162.356126
FJD 2.635826
FKP 0.867102
GBP 0.867734
GEL 3.171696
GGP 0.867102
GHS 12.200257
GIP 0.867102
GMD 83.678408
GNF 10153.742385
GTQ 8.981925
GYD 244.845224
HKD 9.186626
HNL 30.629155
HRK 7.537425
HTG 153.575822
HUF 399.280416
IDR 19089.850623
ILS 3.919825
IMP 0.867102
INR 101.146057
IQD 1533.057938
IRR 49283.4483
ISK 142.434345
JEP 0.867102
JMD 187.669334
JOD 0.829734
JPY 172.261202
KES 151.855558
KGS 102.340977
KHR 4690.483222
KMF 493.857789
KPW 1053.288792
KRW 1622.008808
KWD 0.357282
KYD 0.9753
KZT 624.43433
LAK 25239.600229
LBP 104859.602826
LKR 353.018827
LRD 234.644173
LSL 20.602623
LTL 3.455534
LVL 0.707891
LYD 6.340464
MAD 10.543471
MDL 19.848045
MGA 5180.533708
MKD 61.564501
MMK 2456.363932
MNT 4200.462756
MOP 9.462875
MRU 46.449785
MUR 53.235831
MVR 18.019336
MWK 2029.309063
MXN 21.832719
MYR 4.952046
MZN 74.850385
NAD 20.602623
NGN 1792.143945
NIO 43.063149
NOK 11.889056
NPR 161.698658
NZD 1.963426
OMR 0.449999
PAB 1.170321
PEN 4.167005
PGK 4.91936
PHP 66.610061
PKR 333.501434
PLN 4.257423
PYG 8899.650693
QAR 4.266812
RON 5.071414
RSD 117.208305
RUB 91.721498
RWF 1691.674279
SAR 4.390103
SBD 9.695886
SCR 17.333586
SDG 702.769843
SEK 11.214073
SGD 1.499521
SHP 0.919657
SLE 26.916275
SLL 24540.202914
SOS 668.868908
SRD 42.920017
STD 24222.444896
STN 24.502524
SVC 10.239749
SYP 15215.82151
SZL 20.609123
THB 37.719898
TJS 11.234957
TMT 4.107685
TND 3.427353
TOP 2.74092
TRY 47.308557
TTD 7.947819
TWD 34.43788
TZS 3042.729269
UAH 48.887674
UGX 4199.432633
USD 1.170281
UYU 47.254868
UZS 14749.519522
VES 136.88189
VND 30596.985357
VUV 138.992756
WST 3.085016
XAF 656.024585
XAG 0.030046
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.162742
XCG 2.109217
XDR 0.81669
XOF 656.004963
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.978836
ZAR 20.578541
ZMK 10533.934167
ZMW 27.063788
ZWL 376.829864
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

The temperature the human body cannot survive
The temperature the human body cannot survive / Photo: Frederic J. BROWN - AFP/File

The temperature the human body cannot survive

Scientists have identified the maximum mix of heat and humidity a human body can survive.

Text size:

Even a healthy young person will die after enduring six hours of 35-degree Celsius (95 Fahrenheit) warmth when coupled with 100 percent humidity, but new research shows that threshold could be significantly lower.

At this point sweat -- the body's main tool for bringing down its core temperature -- no longer evaporates off the skin, eventually leading to heatstroke, organ failure and death.

This critical limit, which occurs at 35 degrees of what is known "wet bulb temperature", has only been breached around a dozen times, mostly in South Asia and the Persian Gulf, Colin Raymond of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory told AFP.

None of those instances lasted more than two hours, meaning there have never been any "mass mortality events" linked to this limit of human survival, said Raymond, who led a major study on the subject.

But extreme heat does not need to be anywhere near that level to kill people, and everyone has a different threshold depending on their age, health and other social and economic factors, experts say.

For example, more than 61,000 people are estimated to have died due to the heat last summer in Europe, where there is rarely enough humidity to create dangerous wet bulb temperatures.

But as global temperatures rise -- last month was confirmed on Tuesday as the hottest in recorded history -- scientists warn that dangerous wet bulb events will also become more common.

The frequency of such events has at least doubled over the last 40 years, Raymond said, calling the increase a serious hazard of human-caused climate change.

Raymond's research projected that wet bulb temperatures will "regularly exceed" 35C at several points around the world in the coming decades if the world warms 2.5C degrees above preindustrial levels.

- 'Really, really dangerous' -

Though now mostly calculated using heat and humidity readings, wet bulb temperature was originally measured by putting a wet cloth over a thermometer and exposing it to the air.

This allowed it to measure how quickly the water evaporated off the cloth, representing sweat off of skin.

The theorised human survival limit of 35C wet bulb temperature represents 35C of dry heat as well as 100 percent humidity -- or 46C at 50 percent humidity.

To test this limit, researchers at Pennsylvania State University in the United States measured the core temperatures of young, healthy people inside a heat chamber.

They found that participants reached their "critical environmental limit" -- when their body could not stop their core temperature from continuing to rise -- at 30.6C wet bulb temperature, well below the previously theorised 35C.

The team estimated that it would take between five to seven hours before such conditions would reach "really, really dangerous core temperatures," Daniel Vecellio, who worked on the research, told AFP.

- The most vulnerable -

Joy Monteiro, a researcher in India who last month published a study in Nature looking at wet bulb temperatures in South Asia, said that most deadly heatwaves in the region were well below the 35C wet bulb threshold.

Any such limits on human endurance are "wildly different for different people," he told AFP.

"We don't live in a vacuum -- especially children," said Ayesha Kadir, a paediatrician in the UK and health advisor at Save the Children.

Small children are less able to regulate their body temperature, putting them at greater risk, she said.

Older people, who have fewer sweat glands, are the most vulnerable. Nearly 90 percent of the heat-related deaths in Europe last summer were among people aged over 65.

People who have to work outside in soaring temperatures are also more at risk.

Whether or not people can occasionally cool their bodies down -- for example in air conditioned spaces -- is also a major factor.

Monteiro pointed out that people without access to toilets often drink less water, leading to dehydration.

"Like a lot of impacts of climate change, it is the people who are least able to insulate themselves from these extremes who will be suffering the most," Raymond said.

His research has shown that El Nino weather phenomena have pushed up wet bulb temperatures in the past. The first El Nino event in four years is expected to peak towards the end of this year.

Wet bulb temperatures are also closely linked to ocean surface temperatures, Raymond said.

The world's oceans hit an all-time high temperature last month, beating the previous 2016 record, according to the European Union's climate observatory.

P.Svatek--TPP