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Most collide on forward edge Some collide on backside About a million average sized droplets would be required to produce a raindrop! Terminal velocity: Almost 10 m/s for largest raindrops
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Collisions cause coalescence… but very small droplets can avoid impact
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Why can a cumuliform cloud produce heavier precipitation than a stratiform cloud?
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Supercooled water droplets
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Cumulonimbus clouds Top = ice (fuzzy cloud margins) Bottom = liquid (sharp margins) Middle = mix of ice & water
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Ice forms directly on ice nuclei (from vapour) Promote freezing of supercooled droplets (contact nuclei) Freezing nuclei can cause freezing when immersed in a liquid drop They also promote condensation
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Higher saturation vapour pressure Ice crystals grow at the expense of water droplets
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The Bergeron Process Lower SVP Enough water vapour to prevent droplets from evaporating away
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Graupel or snow pellets -supercooled droplets freeze on contact with ice crystals (riming or accretion) Snowflakes form through aggregation (ice crystals join, esp. if not too cold) As ice crystals fall…
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Source: Desert Research Institute, Nevada, USA Source: North Dakota Cloud Modification Project, USA
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Rain Rainshowers Raindrop shape
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Ice pellet formation
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Freezing Rain
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Rime ice (review)
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Hail Formation
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Hail Grows by accretion (freezing of supercooled liquid droplets) Must remain in cloud for 5-10 min
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Aguado: Understanding Weather and Climate, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
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Lake Effect Snow Formation Insert Fig 7-13
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Seasonal Lake Effect Snow Averages
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Doppler Radar Precipitation Estimates
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