Sunday, November 25, 2018

PRECIPITATION TYPES - Precipitation or hydrometeor is any particle of water that originates in the atmosphere and falls to the ground. Rain is comprised of liquid water droplets, known as raindrops. Snow is millions of tiny ice crystals that collect and form into flakes, which we know as snowflakes. Graupel, (also known as "snow pellets" or "soft hail") will crush and break apart into granules. If a snowflake partially melts, but then refreezes, you get sleet. Hail is 100% ice, falls only during thunderstorms. Freezing rain is similarly to sleet. They freeze when they strike objects on the ground whose surface temperatures are 32°F or colder.

freezing rain icicles
.................................................

Precipitation Types
Splashing Water Drops On Road
Rain, Snow, Sleet, and Other Types of Precipitation
By Tiffany Means


Precipitation. Some find it an intimidatingly long word, but it simply means any particle of water (be it liquid or solid) that originates in the atmosphere and falls to the ground.
In meteoroloty, an even fancier term that means the same thing is hydrometeor.
There are only so many forms water can take, and because of this, only a limited number of precipitation types. The main types include:

Rain

Rain is comprised of liquid water droplets, known as raindrops.
Rain is unique because it's one of the few precipitation types that can occur during any season. As long as air temperatures are above freezing (32°F), rain will fall.

Snow

While we think of snow and ice as two different things, snow is actually millions of tiny ice crystals that collect and form into flakes, which we know as snowflakes.
In order for snow to fall outside your window, air temperatures at the ground and well above the surface must stay below freezing (32°F).
It can be slightly above freezing at some pockets and still snow as long as they aren't substantially above the freezing mark and stay above it for very long, or else the snowflakes will melt.

Graupel

If supercooled water droplets freeze onto falling snowflakes, you get what's called "graupel."
When this happens, the snow crystal loses it's identifiable six-sided shape and instead becomes a clump of snow and ice.
Graupel, (also known as "snow pellets" or "soft hail") looks white like snow. If pressed between your fingers, it will usually crush and break apart into granules. When it falls, it bounces like sleet does.

Sleet

If a snowflake partially melts, but then refreezes, you get sleet.
In other words, sleet forms when a thin layer of above-freezing air is sandwiched in-between a deep layer of sub-freezing air high up in the atmosphere and another down at low levels.
In such a scenario, the precipitation starts out as snow, falls into a layer of warmer air at mid-levels and partially melts, reenters subfreezing air, and refreezes while falling in it towards the ground.
Sleet is small and round, which is why it is sometimes referred to as "ice pellets." It makes an unmistakable sound when hitting and bouncing off of the ground and your house.

Hail

Often confused with sleet, is hail, which is 100% ice but is not necessarily a wintertime event. It usually falls only during thunderstorms.
Hail is smooth, rounded (although parts of it can be flat or have spikes), and can be anywhere from pea-sized to as large as a baseball.
Although hail is ice, it is more of a threat to damaging property and vegetation than it is to causing slick travel conditions.

Freezing Rain

Freezing rain forms similarly to sleet, except the icecream sandwich is layer of warm air at mid-levels is deep.
Precipitation either starts out as snow or supercooled raindrops, but becomes all rain in the warm layer.
While freezing air may hug the ground, it is such a thin layer that the raindrops don't have enough time to freeze into sleet before reaching the ground.
Instead, they freeze when they strike objects on the ground whose surface temperatures are 32°F or colder.
If you think the "rain" in freezing rain makes this winter weather event somewhat harmless, think again!
Some of the most disastrous winter storms and ice storms are due primarily to freezing rain.
That's because when freezing rain falls, it covers trees, roadways, and everything else on the ground with a smooth, clear coating of ice or "glaze," which can make for hazardous travel.
Ice accumulations can also weigh down tree branches and power lines, causing damage from downed trees and also widespread power outages.

Tiffany Means is a meteorologist, science writer, and avid cloud watcher/photographer.

Experience
Tiffany has been finding beauty skyward and sharing it with others since the age of 5. By twelve, she knew she wanted to pursue weather professionally—thanks in part to the release of the blockbuster film Twister. Since those days, Tiffany has interned with the domestic and international weather departments at CNN, written monthly climate reports for NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Prediction, and participated in a number of science outreach events (such as the Science Olympiad Competition). She has personally experienced such weather greats as the Blizzard of 1993, and the floods of Hurricane Francis (2004) and Ivan (2004).
Education
Tiffany holds a bachelor’s degree in Atmospheric Science with a concentration in weather forecasting from the University of North Carolina at Asheville.
Tiffany is a proud member of the American Meteorological Society (AMS).
Tiffany Means
"Weather affects us all. We check it on a daily basis, and talk about it with complete strangers...but it is so much more than 5-day forecasts and small talk! Through my enthusiasm for and expertise in the weather sciences, I hope to spark your curiosity about our atmosphere, create an awareness that will keep you weather ready and safe, and strengthen your environmental responsibility to our atmosphere, water, and earth."
Contact Tiffany: Tiffany can be reached at aboutweatherexpert@gmail.com with questions, comments, reprint requests, or suggestions. You can also connect with her via the social links below.


You might also like:

 

Rhythm of the 
Rain

The Cascades

CLICK HERE . . . to view complete playlist . . . 

https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2018/06/rhythm-of-rain-cascades-listen-to.html

...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Precipitation is needed to replenish water to the earth

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricare.blogspot.com/2021/01/precipitation-precipitation-is-needed.html

........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Rain Clouds

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2020/11/rain-clouds-science-in-bible-clouds-are.html

............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Chance of Rain

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricare.blogspot.com/2018/08/chance-of-rain-making-sense-of.html

...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Shocking Facts about Fresh Water

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricare.blogspot.com/2020/08/shocking-facts-about-fresh-water-while.html

...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Let's Talk About Water

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2019/12/lets-talk-about-water-in-all.html

.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Ask for rain. Ask for more rain

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2019/05/ask-for-rain-ask-for-more-rain-why.html

.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

The Water Cycle

CLICK HERE . . . to view . . . 

https://puricare.blogspot.com/2021/01/the-water-cycle-what-is-water-cycle.html


heavy snowfall park bench


Splashing Water Drops On Roadheavy snowfall park benchgraupel on flower

hailstones deckfreezing rain icicles

No comments:

Post a Comment