1 / 17

Precipitation

Precipitation. Another process brought to you by the water cycle. The Five Types of Precipitation. Rain Freezing Rain Sleet Snow Hail. Rain. Hits the ground as liquid water. Can start as liquid water or ice. Ice melts as it falls, turning into rain. What shape is a raindrop?

Download Presentation

Precipitation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Precipitation Another process brought to you by the water cycle

  2. The Five Types of Precipitation • Rain • Freezing Rain • Sleet • Snow • Hail

  3. Rain • Hits the ground as liquid water. • Can start as liquid water or ice. Ice melts as it falls, turning into rain. • What shape is a raindrop? • Rain is measured with a rain gauge

  4. The shape of a rain drop

  5. Rain

  6. Snow • Snow is formed when water vapor turns directly into ice without ever passing through a liquid state. This happens as water condenses around an ice crystal. • Snow can be ice pellets or snow flakes. As snow falls to the ground, it often melts on the warm surface of the Earth.

  7. Snow

  8. Sleet • Sleet refers to a mixture of snow and rain, as well as raindrops that freeze on their way down. • Sleet, unlike snow, is when raindrops pass through a liquid form before freezing. The result is that they are not light and fluffy. • Sleet bounces when it hits the ground.

  9. Sleet

  10. Freezing Rain • Freezing rain is sometimes called glaze. • Freezing rain happens when water droplets become super-chilled. They do not freeze in air, but freeze the instant they land on an object such as a road, or car.

  11. Freezing Rain / Glaze

  12. Hail • Round balls of ice and snow • Formed, deep within cumulonimbus clouds. • There ice crystals form and begin to fall towards the Earth’s surface. As this happens, wind gusts pick up the ice crystals pushing them back up high into the clouds. As they begin to again fall down, they grow in size. Again, a wind gust might catch the growing hail stone pushing it back up high into the cloud. This may be repeated several more times, until the hail stone becomes too heavy for the wind to carry, causing it to finally fall.

  13. Hail • True hailstones occur only at the beginning of thunderstorms and never when the ground temperature is below freezing. • Hailstones can be 2 mm -13 cm. • Often several hailstones freeze together into a large, shapeless, heavy mass of ice and snow.

  14. Hail Videohttp://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es1805/es1805page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization

  15. Resources • http://commons.wikimedia.org • http://www.geography.hunter.cuny.edu/~tbw/wc.notes/5.cond.precip/sleet_formation.htm • www.unitedstreaming.com • http://www.kidsgeo.com/geography-for-kids/0100-atmospheric-moisture.php

More Related