windschok
Windschok is a term used in some German-language sources to describe the wind-chill effect—the perceived decrease in air temperature on exposed skin that occurs when wind accelerates heat loss from the body. Although related to the widely used wind-chill concept, windschok is not a standard meteorological term in most German-speaking regions; the more common terms are Windkälte or wind chill itself. The phenomenon arises because moving air erodes the warm boundary layer of air immediately around the skin, increasing convective heat transfer. The stronger the wind and the lower the air temperature, the greater the perceived cold.
Weather forecasts express this effect as a wind-chill index, calculated from measured air temperature and wind
Historically, wind-chill concepts emerged in the mid-20th century, with later refinements and regional variants. In German-language