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10/13/2009 Precipitation on ground Condensation if Dew Point is above 0o C Dew If DP is below 0o C Precipitation Types and Formation Frost is NOT frozen dew… Precipitation in the Air Frost and Frozen Dew Snow to water ratio approximately 10:1 10 cm of snow = 1 cm water Snow – the most common form of precipitation Deposition forms snow flakes flake size >1mm to <2cm Smallest flake size at cold temperatures Formation of Rain Snow Cloud droplets rise above freezing level (super-cooled water forms) Since ice crystals form more easily than water droplets, super-cooled water evaporates, then deposits and forms snow When snow falls through warm air it melts and falls as rain Coalescence (Warm locations) small drops coalesce (collect) to larger ones BOTH - when ice or water drop gets too heavy to stay suspended, it falls 1 10/13/2009 Rime Ice Precipitation – Rain Condensation forms Cloud droplets droplets <.02mm (1/50 mm) droplets stay suspended in the air Liquid Precipitation Rain drops 5mm - .5mm Drizzle drops <.5mm Super-cooled water in clouds freezes on surfaces. Other Liquid Precipitation Other Frozen Precipitation Virga Rain that evaporates before reaching the ground Sleet Rain falls through cold air (<0oC temp) freezes before reaching the ground Freezing rain (glaze ice) Rain hits freezing surface. Precipitation Types Freezing Rain T T T l l l l T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T l l l l l l T T T l l l l l l T T T l l l l l T T T l l l l l l lT T T l l RAIN l l l l l FREEZING RAIN l l T l l l SLEET T T T T T SNOW 2 10/13/2009 Precipitation - Hail Greensboro Hail Storm Mother’s Day 2006 Hail – Solid precipitation (ice) formed in convection currents in cumulonimbus clouds. Each cycle a new layer of ice is added Hail falls when gravity is stronger than the updraft. 3