The “feels like” temperature at a gusty beach is likely to be much lower than the actual air temperature.Credit:Nick Moir
In the upcoming redesign of the Bureau of Meteorology’s website,the feels like measure will feature almost as prominently as the actual temperature.
“Feels like temperature is how the air will feel to the human body,when factoring in relative humidity,moisture and wind speed,” the bureau’s Dean Narramore said. “The stronger the wind and the drier the air,the more heat is taken away from your body,so it feels colder and colder.”
At 7.30am on Monday at Observatory Hill,for example,the air temperature was a crisp 6.7 degrees,but the feels like temperature had plunged to zero,so out-and-about Sydneysiders would have felt freezing.
In winter,wind chill is the biggest factor behind the feels like figure. Gusts can blow away a thin layer of warmer air around our bodies that helps insulate us from the cold.
Wind speeds between 40 and 60km/h can drive the feels like temperature 10-15 degrees lower than the air temperature,Narramore said.