Hottest time of the day?
Hottest time of the day?
Author
Discussion

Los Palmas 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

252 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
Please can the PH intelligentsia settle a long-running argument between me and my driver's mate.

I believe that the hottest time of the day is noon, when the sun is highest in the sky - and back this up with evidence supplied by none other than Noel Coward.

He insists that the hottest time is a bit later, around 1400 or 1500. The idiot.

So, who's wrong?

ShadownINja

79,231 posts

304 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
You're both right. It's from about midday to 3pm.

http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/health_advice/facts/sun...

Edited by ShadownINja on Sunday 28th June 14:13

Los Palmas 7

Original Poster:

29,908 posts

252 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
ShadownINja said:
You're both right. It's from about midday to 3pm.
Well, that's disappointing. How am I supposed to shove my tongue behind my bottom lip and make "uuuuuur" noises at him if we're both right?

Lemmonie

6,314 posts

277 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
Well is STARTS at noon, so you are more right!!

Digger

16,078 posts

213 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
We have a good week coming up to test this theory out. I would suggest closer to 3pm than midday, as there is more latent heat assuming the sun stays out etc?

cottonfoo

6,047 posts

232 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
According to my graphs (WMR928 logging to rrdtool), and assuming no cloud or cold fronts moving in, the hottest part (in my garden at least) is from 2-3pm.

Puggit

49,430 posts

270 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
There's no hard and fast rule.

Yesterday the highest temp was at 12.38pm, Friday was 7.15pm, and today we're at the highest temp of the year, let alone the day, right now (15.25).

ali_kat

32,133 posts

243 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
Los Palmas 7 said:
I believe that the hottest time of the day is noon, when the sun is highest in the sky - and back this up with evidence supplied by none other than Noel Coward.

He insists that the hottest time is a bit later, around 1400 or 1500. The idiot.

So, who's wrong?
Your mate wink

The sun is at it's hottest at it's height - midday

However, it takes a longer time to heat the air up, so the longer it is shining, the hotter it will get, until it starts to go down - hence we have cooler evenings and mornings

I think wink

pad58

12,549 posts

203 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
Theres no sun out now ,but its sill very muggy and hot and its.....18.39 (twenty to seven)

(pulls another ringpull)

LeoSayer

7,667 posts

266 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
I think you're wrong (during British summer time anyway).

The sun is highest in the sky just after 1pm - we are currently in BST, the clocks are one hour ahead of GMT.

tonyvid

9,889 posts

265 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
ali_kat said:
Los Palmas 7 said:
I believe that the hottest time of the day is noon, when the sun is highest in the sky - and back this up with evidence supplied by none other than Noel Coward.

He insists that the hottest time is a bit later, around 1400 or 1500. The idiot.

So, who's wrong?
Your mate wink

The sun's IR radiation is at it's hotteststrongest at it's height - midday

However, it takes a longer time to heat the air up, so the longer it is shining, the hotter it will get, until it starts to go down - hence we have cooler evenings and mornings

I think wink
Almost tongue out

Norbury90

6,909 posts

228 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
I am also in the 2-3pm camp. The sun is the thing that warms us up, so the longer it is out, the warmer it will get. Isn't the coldest time meant to be just before sunrise? (4-6am) rather than midnight, which it should be based on your theory.

ali_kat

32,133 posts

243 months

Sunday 28th June 2009
quotequote all
tonyvid said:
ali_kat said:
Los Palmas 7 said:
I believe that the hottest time of the day is noon, when the sun is highest in the sky - and back this up with evidence supplied by none other than Noel Coward.

He insists that the hottest time is a bit later, around 1400 or 1500. The idiot.

So, who's wrong?
Your mate wink

The sun's IR radiation is at it's hotteststrongest at it's height - midday

However, it takes a longer time to heat the air up, so the longer it is shining, the hotter it will get, until it starts to go down - hence we have cooler evenings and mornings

I think wink
Almost tongue out
thumbup