eli5: Why does the breeze feel cool?

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If the air is moving faster that means it has higher energy and is hotter, right? If it hits my skin with a higher velocity it is transferring more energy than if it were moving slower. Both of these reasons suggest faster winds should feel hotter but they don’t, the stronger the breeze the cooler it feels. Why?

In: Physics

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Oooh a common question with an interesting take. No one really brings up the added energy from momentum.

Well to address that part first: even “still” air is moving. The air molecules are bouncing around like crazy at around 1000mph (although to be more accurate, it’s a distribution of speeds). A small breeze doesn’t really change much in that regard, since a 5mph breeze is barely anything in comparison. Plus molecules don’t really have to move any faster to travel in a direction, they just have to be moving more in that direction than in other directions.

As for why moving air feels cooler, let’s talk about why *anything* feels cool. When something is cold to the touch, it means heat is transferring from your body to the substance. What youre feeling isn’t temperature, it’s heat flow. The faster heat flows out of your body, the colder it feels. Metals conduct heat really well, so they feel colder than wood, even when both are at the same temperature.

So one factor that affects heat flow is material, but the other is temperature difference. The rate of heat transfer is linearly proportional to the difference in temperature, which means heat flows twice as fast when the temperature difference is twice as high.

So all this comes together to mean that in still air, your body is warming the air around it, and that air doesn’t move very quickly, so the air right next to your skin is significantly warmer than the air in the rest of the room. If there’s a breeze, that warm layer gets blown away and replaced with cooler air from the environment. Because the air is colder, heat flows out from your body faster and it *feels* colder.

There’s also a component of this that has to do with water and evaporation that explains why moving air feels extra cold when you’re wet or sweating. I can go into that if you want.

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