The UV Index color palette revisited
Autores
Resumen
The UV Index (UVI), standardized by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2002, is an internationally
accepted reference for disseminating information on solar UV radiation levels with the purpose of preventing the harmful effects on human health by sun overexposure. The UVI is the erythemal irradiance expressed in a dimensionless unit, with numerical values adapted to a risk scale that considers the “Extreme” level from a UVI value equal to 11 upwards. This scale is linked to a color palette by health risk ranges, and to a graded color palette by units of UVI for more details. Both the numerical scale and its associated risk levels were universally adopted by the scientific community and by global information systems to the population. However, inconsistencies and limitations persist between both UVI color palettes, making their interpretation and application difficult. In the present work all these aspects are addressed, proposing a revised color palette for unit UVI values that resolves each of them. Based on the WHO risk-ranges UVI color palette, the new color palette for unit UVI values gives coherence to both color charts, allowing reliable identification of the risk level bands and of each unit UVI level within them, and solves the need to distinguish between units for numerical values of UVI higher than 11 that are registered daily in many regions of the world.
Cita
Colecciones
Fecha
2023-04-27Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemUtilice este identificador (URI) para citar o enlazar este item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12160/2462El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: