Summer often brings with it trips to the beach, ice cream, and fun in the sun. But it can also bring some very unpleasantâand downright dangerousâweather. Namely, extreme heat and stubborn pockets of high pressure and hot air colloquially called heat domes.Â
What is a heat dome?
During a heat dome, hot air is trapped over an area of land for an extended period of time, similar to how a lid on a boiling pot of water keeps the heat inside of the vessel. Having such high temperatures over one area for a long strength of time causes dangerous and extreme heat.Â
âA heat dome is a relatively new term in the lexicon, referring to a large area of warm air, a very warm air mass thatâs associated with high pressure,â meteorologist and climatologist Eric Kelsey tells Popular Science. âThey get a lot of attention because they often stick around in a region for a long enough period of time to cause significant health impacts to humans and other species too.â
Normally, the jet stream moves in a wave-like pattern. It travels north, south, and then back north again. If these blips in the jet stream become larger, they will slow down and become stationary. A high-pressure system will then stall in the upper levels of the atmosphere, trapping the air. These heat domes primarily form over large land masses during the summer months.

âIn the summertime, the jet stream shifts poleward, or since weâre in the northern hemisphere, northward. When that happens, the jet stream and the associated weather patterns arenât really moving much,â explains Kelsey. âThis allows the high pressure thatâs south of the jet stream and the air mass associated with it to warm up.â
The sun will also intensify this heat. There are often little to no clouds present due to the high-pressure system in place, so the sunâs radiation directly hits the Earth below.Â
The opposite of a heat dome is the polar vortex, when cold Arctic air plunges southward and stalls.
What role does humidity play?
The old moniker âitâs not the heat, itâs the humidityâ holds true with heat domes as well. In the United States, warm water from the Gulf of Mexico and parts of the Atlantic Ocean will evaporate water into the air during the summer.
âUsually with these heat domes, the surface high pressure is located somewhere around or just off the East Coast. Thatâs why we call it the Bermuda High,â says Kelsey. âAround the western side of the high pressure area are south winds that bring this moisture from the Gulf of Mexico northward across the Plains and across the Ohio River Valley.â Â
[ Related: Almost every place on Earth was affected by extreme temperatures this summer. ]
On the West Coast, the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of California off of Mexico can have a similar effect on high-pressure systems.Â
On either side of the country, this added water vapor can make the air more humid. That combination of heat and humidity is dangerous for peopleâs health and can cause heat related illnesses.Â
What makes heat domes move?
The answer is pretty simple: wind and low-pressure systems.
âWhen you have the jet stream dipping southward and making a U-shape, we call it a trough. Where it goes upward is a ridge,â says Kelsey. âThe ridge is where thereâs warm air that has moved northward, and in the trough is where cold air has moved southward.â

When the jet stream dips southwards towards the equator, that movement can generate a low-pressure system and help move the heat dome further east and out into the ocean. Once it is over the ocean, the surface temperatures are cooler and will help bring the temperature down. Â
Are heat domes increasing due to climate change?
Not surprisingly, the answer is yes.Â
âWeâre seeing them occur more frequently and more intensely,â says Kelsey. âHeat domes are certainly more intense when they happen because the jet stream is shifting further north in the northern hemisphere on average, especially in the summer.â
The record-breaking heat domes in the southwestern United States in 2023 were considered âvirtually impossibleâ without climate change. Already this year, parts of Europe and China are seeing temperatures soar above 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Australia also saw its hottest 12-month period on record.Â
How to stay safe in extreme heat
When the temperatures rise, water consumption should rise with it. The heat and humidity will make your body sweat more in an attempt to cool off, so it is important to replace that good old H20 as much as possible. Also, try to do any outdoor activities like gardening or running in the early morning and evening hours, to avoid the hottest times of the day. If youâre a non-human animal, âsplootingâ can also help.Â
Seeking out air conditioning whether at home or a local cooling center is also critical during extended periods of extreme heat.Â
[ Related: 5 ways to stay cool without blasting the AC. ]
âUsually after two or three days of extended extreme heat, heat illnesses really start to set in, because the body hasnât had a chance in 72 hours to cool off,â says Kelsey.Â
Cooling off with air conditioning when possible is particularly important if you live in a city. The urban heat island effect can raise the temperatures compared to suburban or rural areas with more tree cover and green space in general.Â
âYou are going to have possibly a five to six degree temperature difference, and that can be absolutely huge in terms of comfort and your health,â says Kelsey.
Ceiling, desk, and floor fans can also help move the air around and create a breeze. However, using a fan is helpful only up to a certain point.
âFans can actually cause you to cook faster. They can help when the temperature is not too extreme, but if the air temperature is greater than 99 degrees with low relative humidity and your body needs to stay at 98 degrees, just blowing hotter air than your body temperature means youâre cooking yourself faster than without the fan,â says Kelsey. âYour body sweats less in hot, dry weather to conserve water and therefore, there isnât enough evaporation to offset the heat.â
However, fans can be effective in hot and humid conditions, as your body will sweat enough to cool from evaporation.
This story is part of Popular Scienceâs Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something youâve always wanted to know? Ask us.