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CHAPTER 6 PRECIPITATION EXTREMES

CHAPTER 6 PRECIPITATION EXTREMES. Hey Dr. D., I’m Here!. Select D to register your attendance. Questions to answer. Why doesn’t it rain every time it’s cloudy? (in other words, why don’t all cloud droplets fall out as rain?)

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CHAPTER 6 PRECIPITATION EXTREMES

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  1. CHAPTER 6 PRECIPITATION EXTREMES

  2. Hey Dr. D., I’m Here! • Select D to register your attendance.

  3. Questions to answer • Why doesn’t it rain every time it’s cloudy? (in other words, why don’t all cloud droplets fall out as rain?) • What are the different types of precipitation, and how do they form? • How is precipitation measured?

  4. Cloud droplets • Cloud droplets are liquid water, but are much, much smaller than raindrops!

  5. Growth of cloud drops • Most cloud droplets are very tiny (20 μm) • The force of gravity on the tiny drops is small, as is the air resistance: the terminal velocity is small • For very large drops, the force of gravity is larger, as is the air resistance – a large terminal velocity • Therefore: Larger drops fall much faster than small drops

  6. Growth of cloud drops • Now, think of these drops in a cloud (formed by an updraft), with temperature above freezing • The terminal velocity of the tiny drops is only 0.01 m/s – any updraft will be stronger than this, and the cloud drops will remain aloft (or rise even farther) • The terminal velocity of a drop with diameter 2mm/2000 μm has terminal velocity of 6.5 m/s – as long as the updraft is not especially strong, this size of drop can fall as rain

  7. Collision-coalescence • But how do the drops get to be 2mm/2000 μm? • Because large drops fall faster than small ones, they will collide as they fall through the cloud • Many times, these colliding drops will stick to each other – coalescence • Which will form larger raindrops, a thick cumulus cloud or a thin stratus cloud?

  8. Stepped Art Fig. 7-5, p. 169

  9. Clouds and Precipitation Factors • Most important – Liquid Water Content of Cloud • ALSO • Range of droplet sizes • Thickness of cloud • Updrafts • Electric charge of droplets and electric field in cloud

  10. “Cold” processes • Collision-coalescence only works where the cloud is warmer than freezing – what about in the north where much of cloud is cold? • To form cloud drops, need “cloud condensation nuclei” (dust, etc.) To form ice crystals, need “ice nuclei” • However, CCN are much more common in nature than IN • It must be extremely cold (-40°C) for “spontaneous freezing” to occur • In the region between 0 °C and -40 °C, there is a mix of supercooled water and ice crystals • How do these ice crystals grow big enough to fall as precipitation?

  11. The Bergeron process • At a given subfreezing temperature, the saturation vapor pressure over water is greater than that over ice (more molecules, more vapor pressure)

  12. The Bergeron process • Because of this, ice crystals grow at the expense of liquid cloud droplets

  13. Tor Bergeron • Swedish meteorologist, 1891-1977 • One of the leaders of the “Bergen school” of meteorology in Norway, which made many of the pioneering advances in our field • Along with Wegener and Findeisen, discovered that ice crystals grow to form precipitation because of the different saturation vapor pressures above supercooled water and ice From Liljequist (1981)

  14. Growth of ice crystals • The ice crystal reaches its terminal velocity and starts to fall • It can collide with supercooled water drops, which freeze to it – accretion or riming – leads to graupel • It can collide with other ice crystals, and break apart, forming even more ice crystals • It can collide with other ice crystals, which can stick to it – aggregation – this produces snowflakes • As it gets near the ground, these might fall as snow, or melt and fall as rain

  15. Precipitation and Cloud Types • Precipitation in Cold Convective Clouds • Starts quickly (Either C-C or Bergeron) • Most precipitation formed through accretion • Many times rain starts as ice • Cold Layered Clouds (NS and AS) • Less liquid water - C-C less effective • Warm Stratus • Usually just drizzle

  16. Growth mechanisms for ice crystals

  17. Seeding (natural and man-made) • Cloud Seeding • Inject cloud with small particles that act as condensation/ice nuclei, triggering the precipitation process • NEED CLOUDS: seeding does not generate clouds • Cold clouds with a low ratio of ice crystals to droplets best • Man-made: Dry ice, silver iodide • Tricky business – mixed results • Inadvertent seeding

  18. Fig. 6.8, p. 151

  19. Stepped Art Fig. 6.9, p. 151

  20. Fig. 6.10, p. 152

  21. Precipitation Types

  22. Rain • In layered clouds with less intense updrafts, rain will fall at a fairly steady rate and raindrop sizes will be uniform • In a cumulonimbus cloud, there may be no rain in the updraft portion (updraft is stronger than the terminal velocity of rain), but very heavy rain in the downdraft

  23. Snow • Temperature and vapor content in the cloud determines the type of snowflake that forms – “habit” WET DRY

  24. Fig. 6.11, p. 154

  25. Snow • The temperature near the surface can also affect the type of snowflake we see at the ground: • If it falls through warm air (near or just above freezing), it can start to melt, and the wet flakes can stick to each other to create “aggregates” – big fluffy flakes – good for snowballs • If it falls through cold (well below freezing), dry air, we get powder • Snowfall is measured in two ways – depth of snow, and water equivalent • Wet snow will have 6 inches of snow per 1 inch of water • Dry snow will have 20 inches of snow per 1 inch of water • New, dry snow is a very good insulator: can actually protect plants from extreme cold

  26. Fig. 6.13, p. 155

  27. Sleet, freezing rain, rime • Sleet: snowflake melts as it falls, then freezes again before reaching the ground • Requires a deep subfreezing layer near the ground • Freezing rain: snowflake melts as it falls, remains melted, but freezes on contact when it hits the cold ground, trees, cars, power lines, etc. • Rime: similar to freezing rain, but with drops that are even smaller (such as fog): small drops freeze on contact

  28. Fig. 6.18, p. 158

  29. Temperature profiles for different precipitation types

  30. Hail • Unlike sleet and snow, which form in relatively shallow clouds, hail forms in deep cumulonimbus clouds • Hail grows when particles accumulate huge numbers of supercooled water droplets – accretion • Large hail only occurs where there are very strong updrafts -- they keep the heavy stones aloft so they can continue to grow – must remain in the cloud for 5-10 minutes to become golf-ball size • Hail is “severe” if it is greater than 1.00” in diameter (quarter size) June 22, 2003 Aurora, NE 7” diameter

  31. Hail • Large hail often has a layered structure • In cold upper part of cloud, drops freeze immediately – opaque areas with air bubbles: dry growth • In wetter/warmer part, droplets create a layer of water that freezes without air bubbles – clear: wet growth • The more rings, the more of these cycles the stone has been through

  32. Hail Frequency of severe hail in U.S. Hailpads developed at CSU to measure hail size and amount www.cocorahs.org

  33. Fig. 6.25, p. 162

  34. Stepped Art Fig. 6.23, p. 161

  35. Fig. 6.22, p. 159

  36. Fig. 6.21, p. 159

  37. Table 6.1, p. 156

  38. Fig. 6.15, p. 156

  39. EXTREME WEATHER • Aircraft Icing • Aviation hazard is created by the increase in weight as ice forms on the body of the airplane • Most dangerous – clouds with all supercooled liquid, freezing drizzle • Mitigation: • Spray aircraft with anti-freeze prior to flight (de-icing • Avoid deep layers of icing

  40. p. 160

  41. Extreme Precipitation Events

  42. PRECIPITATION—EXTREME EVENTS • The Influence of Mountains • Promote convection • Force air to rise along their windward slopes (orographic uplift) • Rain shadow

  43. Fig. 6.27, p. 163

  44. Fig. 6.28, p. 164

  45. PRECIPITATION—EXTREME EVENTS • Wet regions, dry regions, and precipitation records • “Rainiest” places located on the windward side of mountains • Snowfalls heavier where cool, moist air rises along the windward slopes of mountains • Driest regions of the world lie in the frigid polar region, the leeward side of mountains, and in the belt of subtropical high pressure

  46. Table 6.2, p. 165

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