Calculate wind chill temperature — how cold it actually feels based on air temperature and wind speed, using the Environment Canada / NWS formula.
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Wind chill is the perceived decrease in air temperature felt by exposed skin due to wind. Wind accelerates heat loss from the body by replacing the thin warm air layer surrounding skin with colder air. Wind chill does not affect inanimate objects — a water pipe will not freeze faster due to wind chill if the actual temperature is above freezing.
The Environment Canada/NWS formula (adopted in 2001): Wind Chill (°C) = 13.12 + 0.6215T − 11.37V^0.16 + 0.3965T × V^0.16, where T = air temperature in °C and V = wind speed in km/h. This formula is based on heat loss from exposed facial skin and is the international standard in Canada, the US and UK Met Office.
Risk levels: -10 to -24°C wind chill = slight risk, dress warmly. -25 to -39°C = exposed skin can freeze in 10–30 minutes. -40 to -54°C = exposed skin can freeze in 2–5 minutes; avoid travel if possible. -55°C and below = exposed skin can freeze in under 2 minutes; extremely dangerous conditions. Frostbite and hypothermia are serious risks.
The wind chill effect exists year-round, but the standard wind chill index is specifically designed for temperatures at or below 10°C (50°F). In summer, wind helps cool you through evaporative cooling (enhancing sweat evaporation) and convective cooling. However, on very hot days, if the wind temperature exceeds body temperature, wind actually increases heat gain.
The old formula (from the 1940s) was based on heat loss from a plastic cylinder of water, which poorly models the human face. The 2001 formula was derived from clinical trials measuring heat loss from exposed human faces in a wind tunnel and in winter field studies in Canada. It gives lower (more realistic) wind chill values and was validated against actual frostbite occurrence.
Wind chill measures the cooling effect of wind on cold days (how cold it feels). Heat index measures the combined effect of heat and humidity on hot days (how hot it feels). Both are "apparent temperature" indices representing what conditions feel like to humans. Both only apply within specific temperature ranges where the human body\ thermoregulation is affected.
Layer clothing: moisture-wicking base layer, insulating middle layer (fleece/down) and windproof/waterproof outer shell. Cover extremities — fingers, toes and ears lose heat rapidly. Protect your face (balaclava or face mask) and head (significant heat is lost through an uncovered head). Keep dry — wet clothing dramatically reduces insulation effectiveness.
Yes. Animals with fur or feathers have natural insulation, but wind can penetrate dense coats and reduce their effectiveness. The wind chill chart for animals differs from humans because their surface-area-to-volume ratio, coat quality and metabolic rate differ. Livestock need sheltered housing in extreme wind chill conditions, especially newborns and animals in poor condition.