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EVAPORATIONAL COOLING

METEOROLOGIST JEFF HABY

The potential for the greatest rate of evaporational cooling occurs when temperatures are warm and the dewpoint depression is large. As temperatures warm, the potential to evaporate moisture in the air increases exponentially. As dewpoint depression increases, the relative humidity decreases and the evaporational potential increases. Evaporative cooling potential is found by calculating the wetbulb depression. The wetbulb depression is the difference between the temperature and the wetbulb temperature. The wetbulb temperature is found by cooling the initial temperature as much as possible by evaporational cooling. The largest wetbulb depressions will occur in warm and dry air.