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Absolute Humidity

Old 17th November 2001 | 20:45
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From: England
Post Absolute Humidity

Could someone please give me a definition of absolute humidity, an how its different to relative humidity
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Old 17th November 2001 | 22:19
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Lightbulb

Absolute humidity is the amount of water in a certain volume of air

e.g 2 kg/m3 would mean 2 kg of water per cubic metre of air

Relative humidity is the fraction of humidity as a total of the maximum humidity (ie. the saturation point).

So say if at a certain temperature air would saturate at an absolute humidity of 10kg/m3, our example above with 2kg/m3 would be 20% relative humidity.

Relative humidity can be worked out by finding the air temperature and dewpoint (and converting via a chart), usually with a wet-bulb/dry-bulb device as in a Stevenson screen.

The figures in the above are more for demonstration than realism.

cheers!
foggy.

[ 17 November 2001: Message edited by: foghorn ]
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