Community Corner

Photo Album: It's hot. How are you staying cool?

Send us your photos! The one who submits the best one gets free ice cream! Email photo and caption to amyjo.brown@patch.com

It doesn't take a meterologist to tell you that it is hot outside. Still, Bob Coblentz, a meterologist at the  in Moon, confirmed it, saying temperatures hit a record high today in Pittsburgh.

The highest temperature the National Weather Service has on record for this date in the region is 96 degrees, reached in 1901 and 1933, said Colentz. A heat advisory is in effect from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. The index so far has reached a high of 105, "and that's in the shade," Coblentz said. 

The heat index is the "feels like" temperature. 

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"This means that in the sun, it could feel like 115 or 120 degrees," he said.

Coblentz also pointed out that the dew point today is 72, which is extremely high. The dew point, he said, measures the moisture in the air.

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"Anytime you get a dew point in the 70s, it feels pretty oppressive outside," he said. 

It's always important to pay attention to the dew point, rather than the relative humidity, because it's a better indicator of how the temperature feels, he said.

"Today, the relative humidity is between 50 and 55 percent, but it doesn't feel like that at all, so you can see that this number doesn't translate to what it feels like outside," Coblentz added.

For those with hopes of cooling off, Colentz predicts that temperatures will drop slightly by Sunday and will "feel a lot better" by Monday, even though it will still be in the mid-80s. 

"What would normally feel really hot will now feel good," he said. 

How are you handling the heat? Send us your photos! The one who submits the best gets free ice cream! Deadline is 8 p.m. Sunday. The winner will be announced Monday morning. Photos will be published on the site as they come in. Email photo and caption to amyjo.brown@patch.com 

(Please include the name and age of the person(s) in the photos and what part of the North Hills they're from.) 

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