Abstract

The objective of research involved the comparison of daily and seasonal courses of thermal stress occurring in Central Europe depending on the inflowing air mass. The analysis used data from Warsaw (1991–2000), including air temperature (°C), water vapour pressure (hPa), wind speed (m s−1) and cloud cover (%). Universal thermal climate index was calculated and subsequently averaged for the individual months and four types of atmospheric air masses: polar maritime (mP), arctic(A), polar continental (cP) and tropical (T). The studies analysed differences in daily patterns of the averaged values of universal thermal climate index between air masses and determined the frequency of days with various types of thermal stress in individual air masses. The analyses indicated that under the conditions of Central Europe, the highest daily variance of biothermal conditions occurs between the masses of cP and T in the spring and autumn. Considerably greater diversity of biothermal conditions was observed between the masses during daytime compared with nighttime, especially in the warm half of the year. The thermal stress, which can be encountered in Central Europe, ranges from an “extreme cold stress” in winter at night and early morning hours to “very strong heat stress” in summer at noon. Extreme thermal stress is related primarily to the masses of cP, A and T. The most optimal biothermal conditions occur during the advection of mP air.

Highlights

  • The area of Central Europe is located in zone influenced by air masses from the west—flowing from over the Atlantic Ocean, as well as from the east, from the Asian continent

  • Biothermal contrasts between polar maritime and arctic air masses, which are the most frequent in Central Europe, are the lowest of all studied differences

  • The advection of polar maritime air makes the universal thermal climate index (UTCI) higher by about 5.0– 7.0 °C compared with A masses

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Summary

Introduction

The area of Central Europe is located in zone influenced by air masses from the west—flowing from over the Atlantic Ocean, as well as from the east, from the Asian continent. Air masses from the north and the south collide above it A comparison of bioclimatic characteristics of various times of the year and day in each of the masses inflowing over the area of Central Europe will allow determining which type of atmospheric air inflowing at given time is related to burdensome biothermal conditions, and which masses exert a smaller stress. The objective of this research involved the comparison of daily and yearly course of human body thermal stress occurring in Central Europe depending on the inflowing air mass

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