Weather Guys - March

  • What is sleet?
    What is sleet?

    What is sleet? ENLARGE Photo: Generation X-Ray When precipitation droplets refreeze before hitting the ground, you get sleet. Sleet is translucent balls of ice that are frozen raindrops. The most common forms of precipitation are rain, snow, freezing rain, and sleet. In Wisconsin, precipitation usually begins as ice particles in a cloud. The temperature conditions [...]


    Tuesday, January 17th, 2012
  • Where does the water come from in Midwestern snow storms?
    Where does the water come from in Midwestern snow storms?

    Where does the water come from in Midwestern snow storms? ENLARGE Photo: NOAA/NASA GOES Project Water can travel a long way to dump onto the Midwest as snow. This picture shows the storm system that cause the massive February 2011 storm. Last week we were visited for the second time this winter by a sizable [...]


    Monday, January 16th, 2012
  • Do abundant snowstorms suggest global warming is not occurring?
    Do abundant snowstorms suggest global warming is not occurring?

    Do abundant snowstorms suggest global warming is not occurring? ENLARGE Graphic: Rutgers University Global Snow Lab This graphs shows the area of land covered by snow over the past few decades in North America. No. These storms are individual weather events, which cannot be used to support or refute climate trends. Which also means that [...]


    Monday, January 16th, 2012
  • Why do bridges ice before the road?
    Why do bridges ice before the road?

    Why do bridges ice before the road? People in cold climates are used to signs warning that “bridge freezes before road.” Water on surface will freeze once the surface becomes cold enough, but why does the road cool faster? ENLARGE Photo: Petelewisr Beware of the bridge on an icy day! Warming and cooling result from [...]


    Wednesday, January 4th, 2012
  • What is freezing rain?
    What is freezing rain?

    What is freezing rain? ENLARGE Photo: Mike Giovinazzo Freezing rain covers everything with a sheet of ice. When water particles fall from clouds and reach the surface as precipitation, they do so primarily as rain, snow, freezing rain or sleet. The many types of precipitation occur because water can change phase as it falls. In [...]


    Wednesday, January 4th, 2012
  • Why does snow disappear?
    Why does snow disappear?

    Why does snow disappear? ENLARGE Photo: Amanda Graham Sublimation in action. When the snow builds up on my patio, it starts to evaporate after a few days, even though the temperature is still below freezing. On average, what percentage of our snowfall each year evaporates back to the air? The transition of water from the [...]


    Tuesday, December 13th, 2011
  • Why do I feel colder on a damp day?
    Why do I feel colder on a damp day?

    Why do I feel colder on a damp day? © S.V. Medaris A damp, January morning brings hoarfrost to a Wisconsin farm. Let’s define a damp day as one with high relative humidity but without precipitation or fog. High relative humidity reduces evaporation, which can be dangerous in high temperatures. Although air temperatures are too [...]


    Monday, January 10th, 2011
  • How do snow fences work?
    How do snow fences work?

    How do snow fences work? Photo: flickr via Wikimedia Commons, by John Talbot. Snow fence might not have helped here (Ottawa, Canada). Snow carried by wind can reduce visibility and cover roads. We cannot “switch off” the wind; but we can slow it with obstacles. Obstacles like trees and fences break wind into a swirl [...]


    Monday, December 27th, 2010
  • What is the winter solstice?
    What is the winter solstice?

    What is the winter solstice? The winter solstice is the day of the year with the fewest hours of daylight. In 2009, the Northern Hemisphere winter solstice occurred on December 21. 2004 winter solstice viewed at the Lawrence Hall of Science in Berkeley, California, USA. Photo by:Tim Ereneta As Earth orbits the Sun, its axis [...]


    Monday, December 20th, 2010
  • Is Madison, Wisconsin in a snow belt? What is the origin of the term?
    Is Madison, Wisconsin in a snow belt? What is the origin of the term?

    Is Madison, Wisconsin in a snow belt? What is the origin of the term? While the lakes around Madison provide many winter recreation activities, the local lakes do not yield a snow belt. Map by Pierre cb We refer to agricultural regions in the United States as ‘belts’, such as the cotton belt and wheat [...]


    Monday, December 13th, 2010


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