Sentences with phrase «heat index for»

Not exact matches

For the next few days, temperatures are expected to be in the 90s, and the heat index could reach 100 degrees or higher, according to the National Weather Service.
At the end of the day, Gil Piette and Jimmy McDonald thanked volunteers for their hard work on such a hot day — the heat index was 105!
For days the mercury hovered in the three - digit zone, with heat indices reaching 120 degrees.
Pour 2 cups of raspberries, 1/2 teaspoon of lemon juice and 3 tablespoons of Xylitol sugar or coconut sugar (both low - glycemic index foods), and a dash of Himalayan salt in a medium saucepan and heat covered on medium - low for about 2 minutes.
For the fruit sauce I pour 2 cups of raspberries, 1/2 teaspoon of lemon juice and 3 tablespoons of Xyilitol sugar or coconut sugar (both low — glycemic index foods), and a dash of Himalayan salt in a medium saucepan and heat covered on medium - low for about 2 minutFor the fruit sauce I pour 2 cups of raspberries, 1/2 teaspoon of lemon juice and 3 tablespoons of Xyilitol sugar or coconut sugar (both low — glycemic index foods), and a dash of Himalayan salt in a medium saucepan and heat covered on medium - low for about 2 minutfor about 2 minutes.
Revenue benefits include 20 - year index - linked, government - backed incentive payments, with about # 2m ($ 2.84 m) per annum in support through the government's RHI scheme and a further # 1m ($ 1.42 m) through the sale of gas to the wholesale market and from the Feed in Tariff scheme for the power generated in the combined heat and power (CHP) engine.
The team support staff must closely monitor all players, instead of only a particular focus on less fit, large players with an excessive body mass index (BMI), for signs and symptoms of developing heat - related injury during football practice or competition in stressful environments.
Some groups have issued guidelines for modifying or canceling practice based on the heat index (air temperature and the humidity).
Even if a state's concussion safety law does cover community - based, private sports programs, very few states have enacted laws that cover all aspects of youth sports safety, such as requiring more broad - based safety training for coaches in first - aid, CPR, and the use of an AED, and the development and implementation of an Emergency Action Plan (EAP) to be triggered in case of medical emergencies, such as a cardiac event (e.g. sudden cardiac arrest), asthma attack, allergic reaction to a bee sting, or heat stroke, and environmental emergencies (lighting, tornado, or an excessively high heat index).
In areas where the climate delivers high summer temperatures, and low humidity, people don't always recognize their need for fluids until their body has become dehydrated, whereas in areas of high humidity, the heat index (how hot it really feels) is higher, and it seems hotter than it actually is.
Level of risk for physical activity can be determined by referring to the Heat Index Chart provided by the National Weather Service (http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/heat/index.shtml).
For example, when the heat index (a metric that uses temperature and humidity to represent human comfort) was 98 degrees, rates of violent crime were 9 percent higher compared to days when the temperature was 57 degrees.
Extreme caution days — days when the heat index tops 90 °F — also pose a hazard for health and are just plain miserable (unless you've got a beach or movie theater nearby).
For instance, in heat - stress - prone Anhui province, where rice growers used to wait for months until insurance companies complete damage assessments, a so - called temperature index insurance service was introduced in 20For instance, in heat - stress - prone Anhui province, where rice growers used to wait for months until insurance companies complete damage assessments, a so - called temperature index insurance service was introduced in 20for months until insurance companies complete damage assessments, a so - called temperature index insurance service was introduced in 2009.
Wet bulb globe temperature is the heat stress metric used by the International Organization for Standardization, and it has well - validated thresholds for when humans can safely work, giving it advantages over alternative metrics such as heat index, said study co-author Chao Li, a hydroclimatology scientist at the University of Victoria in Canada.
Our heat index is over 100 each day so I have to wait for fall for things like this, sigh.
Don't be jealous because I was sweating bullets when I wore it for photos and not to mention it has almost been 100 degrees this week with heat index.
It's definitely still the season for iced tea... our heat index will be well into the 100's today!
As the heat index crept toward the 90 - degree mark Tuesday morning, Baltimore city social studies teacher Ejaz Baluch watched his students at ConneXions School for the Arts begin to fade.
Index funds have been around for more than 40 years, but the «index vs. active» debate has really heated up in recent yIndex funds have been around for more than 40 years, but the «index vs. active» debate has really heated up in recent yindex vs. active» debate has really heated up in recent years.
Index funds are not just for the little guy who canâ $ ™ t take the heat, either.
On the surface, it might seem a recent move by the Carriage Animal Temperature and Heat Index Committee in Charleston would make things better for carriage animals.
Due to health and safety concerns for animals and humans alike, our Rabies Clinic will be canceled on any day that the anticipated heat index is above 100 degrees or if other inclement weather that could jeopardize the safety of pets and humans occurs.
Reading heat as both metaphor and index, these images reveal the harsh struggle for survival lived daily by millions of refugees and migrants, seen but overlooked, and ignored by many.
As the art world gears up for the global onslaught of fall exhibitions and auctions, the latest edition of the Heat Index primes you with a few names you're likely to hear a lot from in the months to come.
The point about heating (adding energy) vs warming (temperatures going up) is a very good one — it might help if the scientists involved with the major temperature series people look at (GISS, RSS, etc) also produced a global surface energy change index that accounted for things like melting ice, which absorb heat without raising temperatures.
Playing outside is already something few kids do here in the summer (Houston) when the afternoon temperature and humidity combine for a heat index over 105F.
The average heat index — a way of expressing how hot it feels after humidity is factored in — for the state officially was 110 degrees or higher on six days.
There has to be some sort of inhomogeneity, such as free surface, cloud droplet, dust particle or abrupt change of refractive index, for the energy in the intercepted electromagnetic radiation to reappear in the form of translational motion (i.e. heat) rather than being confined to vibrational and rotation modes.
Other uses for regional modeling might be considered mundane: more accurate prediction of sea breezes, cloud (ceiling), high and low temperatures, heat indices, and others.
Funny, but I haven't noticed any change in the overall heat index, nor is the ocean anywhere near encroaching on my property — and I literally live within 1000 yards (914 meters for the Eurotrash) of the San Francisco Bay.
By mid-century, for instance, Houston will likely experience an increase in occurrences of two or more consecutive days of heat index above 108 degrees, from the current six to 25 per year.
For example, if you could get a futures contract up and running which paid off against say an index of ocean heat content which is probably the best measured and by far the most important global metric available, you would find out in short order what the market really thought about AGW.
Further, heat waves in the U.S. have not been increasing; the EPA's analysis of the heat wave index for the U.S. [link] shows that the index during the 1930's reached levels almost an order of magnitude greater than the recent decade.
the EPA's analysis of the heat wave index for the U.S. [link] shows that the index during the 1930's reached levels almost an order of magnitude greater than the recent decade.
Employers should consider the heat index — not just the temperature — when determining whether it's safe to work outside, and for how long.
My husband was out of town for 4 days, I'm dealing with a child who has a dislocated elbow and the heat index is over 100 degrees!
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z