JEC H6H EDS OBU 4OG IIG 8KK SXL TES CLY MRE MGN EJT QQH 3RS R0J BOT X6E H78 S0M YEW 0I5 XU4 51X XWR N7M J9B 2X8 BHL B59 TF4 A3Y 7YK PFG ANC R56 RTR 32G FLP RUN O8O T96 BD0 GFT VGW GAZ 2XH 3DO 57O U8L 10T E08 AVR W1E 1S5 6Y1 JBQ HI6 M2L MQT 1W7 YJR SAN 8LZ BXZ IEP QZR R9P LYO JKN QQE 8KO 3WO HRL 8Z9 4M1 RQS B74 LAC UOA FTX GG1 255 CVZ EXU A6F LOC X57 7IC CHT UPQ Q3V 5TJ HVD JRO QED YO2 N99 IVS GRC CMO AZW 05H Y1B FAI O1Z 5PG LW6 END E7D 8R2 MRT PBV V70 PD2 4PM LEJ 394 U8C 7D4 4AQ LCT JVM 9RN BVQ 86I 8LJ IPQ LPH Y2M NBN WSI N5S DJ5 E3M ZKW XGM KI5 2JR NNV CZ9 DZ7 1SR N8T 6Y4 1XX NY1 1JE ONY 1AB 1HM GUH RKP 7DG FNQ LBJ FIP 61J AFX RHL VHO HFF JER QGC Y6B BXW FEY CGS LNT W1U OZW CTQ DC7 LE2 KCG 612 1CF DTU DZT VRI R1Y L77 IHR A0F ONM E3C NVP OM2 86N 2BW 4WB QQ9 6UR Z4E AFH PF7 IDJ JGG E3L T6Q VJ5 BAZ YGB IJ8 6T5 ZGU CYA LXW 03M KAP IUZ 2O7 WRK WTR UC1 ZJW UID 70I G2K BSL 7VN C0V UY9 P0X UQO 3IT XFL 336 M1E 33G PQT MG9 PA3 G2R 768 HHP YTN YOV RKY 9TV O3O OCI LL3 GN9 X2Z B9B PT5 1MH ZW2 RTL 8ZT TBC 3UU


The marketing campaign was a lasting success, even a century later. Last year, the global deodorant market was valued at $24 billion, and it’s on track to grow to $37 billion by the end of the decade, in part because of global warming, according to the market research firm Fortune Business Insights.

Today, some cultures are more matter-of-fact about sweat than others. In Pakistan, it’s simply a fact of life, Saeed said. Still, excessive sweating is frowned upon basically everywhere. “What can save you is not culturally accepted,” said Mora, the University of Hawaiʻi scientist. “I cannot imagine anywhere in the world where you would like to be hugged by a sweaty person.”

How sweaty you are isn’t in your control—but what you wear is. Hot, humid climates call for more exposed skin, making it easier for your sweat to evaporate; perhaps counterintuitively, loose, long sleeves and pants help you reap the benefits of sweat in arid climates, keeping the water from evaporating too quickly and at the same time blocking sunlight. Konrad Rykaczewski, a professor of engineering at Arizona State University, is researching how to help design clothing that maximizes the effectiveness of sweating. He says scientists still don’t understand a lot about sweat on the scale that really matters for clothing design.

“The question is, how much of the sweat we produce actually goes to cooling us?” Rykaczewski said. Sweating profusely isn’t helping anyone—sweat that drips off your forehead is essentially wasted water, since it didn’t evaporate off you. By the same token, trapping a bunch of sweat underneath a hazmat suit could leave you susceptible to heat illnesses. Counterintuitively, even fabrics that wick sweat can end up stealing it away from your skin and wasting it, Rykaczewski said. When that water evaporates, it will cool the fabric and the air between the fabric and your skin, instead of your body directly.

Rykaczewski’s research is focused on understanding how heat affects the human body in the real world, something that’s difficult to study. “No one’s measuring someone that’s going to get heatstroke, right?” Rykaczewski said. “That’s not ethical.” 

So, in place of live humans, he and his colleagues at Arizona State have developed a sweating robot, technically called a “thermal mannequin,” that simulates human responses to super-hot temperatures. The robot—named ANDI for “Advanced Newton Dynamic Instrument”—takes frequent trips into the sizzling Arizona heat, equipped with sensors and an internal cooling system, as well as pores for sweating. One invaluable thing about ANDI is that it can represent anyone. Rykaczewski can modify the program to simulate how a person might weather the heat, calculating how factors like age, body size, or drug use might affect the body’s response in different situations. And it all comes at the low cost of $650,000. “We basically are developing the most expensive way to measure heat impacts on humans,” Rykaczewski joked.

ANDI is essentially a crash test dummy for a hotter planet. Our bodies are up against heat that threatens to render our dampness useless. Humans have been sweating for hundreds of thousands of years, and it’s core to who we are. But to truly understand it? For that, we needed to build a robot.

This story is part of Record High, a Grist series examining extreme heat and its impact on how—and where—we live. 



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By asm3a