Temperature
Air temperature measured about 2 meters above ground. Use it for clothing and comfort.
No active alerts for this location.
This page explains what each reading means and how to use it in daily decisions.
Air temperature measured about 2 meters above ground. Use it for clothing and comfort.
Adjusted temperature that includes wind chill (cold) or heat index (hot/humid).
Speed is how fast air moves. Direction is where wind comes from (for example, West means from the west).
Short bursts stronger than average wind. Important for driving, biking, and outdoor safety.
How much moisture is in the air. Higher humidity can make warm weather feel hotter.
Temperature at which air becomes saturated. Higher dew point means a stickier, more humid feel.
Atmospheric pressure in hPa. Falling pressure can signal unsettled weather.
How far you can clearly see. Low visibility often occurs with fog, heavy rain, or snow.
Percent of sky covered by clouds. 0% is clear; 100% is overcast.
Shows precipitation intensity and motion. Use animation to see where rain/snow is moving.
Higher AQI means worse air. Sensitive groups should reduce outdoor activity when AQI is elevated.
Useful for planning daylight hours, photography, and evening conditions.
Higher values mean more pollution risk, especially for sensitive groups.
Use sustained wind for general conditions and gusts for sudden impacts.
Color shades generally map to precipitation intensity from light to extreme.
Dew point is often the best quick signal for how sticky the air will feel.
The trend matters more than a single pressure number.
These groups should use tighter limits when planning outdoor time.
Use this quick matrix to decide if activity is generally good, caution, or postpone.
Models agree on timing and intensity. Day planning is usually stable.
General pattern is clear, but timing or totals may shift.
Competing scenarios. Recheck often and plan with larger safety margins.
Precipitation can evaporate before reaching the ground, or the core may pass just north/south of your exact location.
A front passage, cloud break, rain-cooled outflow, or wind direction shift can change temperature rapidly.
Sustained wind is an average over time, while gusts capture brief stronger bursts.
Fine particles and ozone are not always visible. Transport winds can carry pollution long distances.
Small speed changes in fronts or storm lines can move arrival by hours, especially in warm-season convection.
Thunderstorms are highly localized. A slight shift in storm track can create large differences over short distances.
High humidity reduces evaporative cooling from skin. Direct sun and low wind can make it feel even warmer.
Radar reflectivity may detect virga, non-reaching snow grains, or weak echoes that do not produce measurable ground accumulation.
A watch means conditions are favorable. A warning means hazardous weather is occurring or imminent and action should be taken now.
Check every few minutes when storms are nearby. Radar and alerts can update quickly as conditions evolve.
Wind direction controls where storm outflow, smoke, and pollution plumes travel, affecting local impact timing.
Look for repeated heavy radar cells over the same area, poor drainage zones, and active flood alerts.
Freezing rain forms glaze ice on roads, trees, and power lines, creating severe traction and infrastructure risk.
Yes. Wind gusts, black ice, or sudden hydroplaning can create hazards even when visibility appears acceptable.
Prioritize official alerts first, then current observations/radar, then short-term forecast trends.
Temperature, visibility, and road conditions can change quickly around sunrise/sunset, and glare risk increases.
Check AQI, temperature/feels-like, wind gusts, and radar trend together. Avoid peak heat, smoke, and nearby lightning.
Temperature where air saturates; stronger comfort indicator than humidity percent.
How hot it feels when humidity is combined with air temperature.
How cold it feels when wind increases heat loss from skin.
Radar measure of returned energy; higher values often indicate heavier precipitation.
Horizontal movement of air that transports heat, moisture, smoke, or haze.
Layer where temperature rises with height, often trapping pollution near the surface.
Cool air spreading from storms that can trigger new storm development.
Very short-term forecasting focused on the next minutes to few hours.