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[personal profile] venta
OK, I've always been prone to generating static electricity. If someone is going to get a shock off a metal thing, it's going to be me.

But over the last couple of months it's been getting a bit silly. My hair is constantly sticking to me/other people/passing objects, I crackle, I get shocks off anything remotely metallic. If I get undressed in the dark I sparkle :)

Which is all quite entertaining in its own way, but I'd like it to stop now. Before I start frying small electronics components. I'm mildly worried every time I pick my laptop up at present.

So, what should I do/not do ? I suspect the fleece I often wear doesn't help, what with it being largely synthetic. I seem to be worst at work, where we have the sort of carpets that don't get on well with rubber-soled shoes, but I'm usually just wandering about in socks. Is it time to break the clogs back out ?

What clothes should I be wearing ? I'd have thought "natural fibres" would be a good start, but wool seems to be something of a mistake.

Is there any truth in the rumour that touching a radiator is a good means of earthing yourself, or was that just some old wives' tale I learnt when I was little ? If not, how do I (practically) earth myself ?

Date: 2004-03-01 08:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onebyone.livejournal.com
I think it is plausible. And a random websearch backs me up (hurrah for the random web), since USA Today thinks that 30% is too dry and 50% is too humid.

I've seen (on TV) athletics competitions at which humidity is above 100%. That's about the point where humidity ceases to be at all funny (other than jokes about swimming, of course).

Date: 2004-03-01 08:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
So how is humidity measured, then ? A quick google suggests to me that 100% humidity is the point at which the air is saturated, so I don't see how it can go over that.

Date: 2004-03-01 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onebyone.livejournal.com

Humidity higher than 100% means that the air is super-saturated with water vapour - at which point water will start to condense out of the air onto any surface which it can use as a seed. This is the gap between when the temperature is low enough for dew to form and when dew finishes forming.

If the air temperature is also around human body temperature, then it becomes basically impossible to lose any body heat to the air, at which point bad things happen.

The reason aeroplanes leave vapour trails is that air at that height is often super-saturated, and the surface of the plane provides sufficient seed for water to condense. The water droplets which are blown off the plane then provide further seed surfaces. I don't know exactly how the process stops - possibly because condensing water heats the air until it's no longer super-saturated?

Date: 2004-03-01 08:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nalsa.livejournal.com
Relative humidity is something to do with the dew point temperature and what the temperature is right now. However, the dew point isn't a constant because it alters with air pressure, so the calculations themselves are faintly complicated. If dew pointoC=ambientoC then humidity=100%. I suppose if it's raining then humidity could be over 100%...

(ooh, google found this for me; the graphs look pretty useful.)

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