This I hear a lot, admitingly only in the UK. Can it be, "too cold to snow"?
:roll:
Another snow question
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Started by Iceman in Snow Forecasts and Snow Reports 23-Dec-2011 - 6 Replies
Iceman posted Dec-2011
The Northern Monkey. Jan'23 Les Arcs
Jocrad74
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
No, apparently. Watched James May's Man Lab with the husband last week, can't remember the science bit, but it can't be too cold to snow, so they say. They reminded viewers that it snows in the Arctic regions at minus-whatever...
Up there for thinking, down there for skiing...
Far Queue
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
I am pretty sure the reason behind the saying is as follows.
In the UK, when it gets very cold, it is usually because there is no cloud cover. Especially if you get a cloudless night in deepest winter. It is because of the lack of clouds that the saying "It is too cold to snow" came about.
That does not in any way mean the statement is correct, just a common held theory on why it is used.
In the UK, when it gets very cold, it is usually because there is no cloud cover. Especially if you get a cloudless night in deepest winter. It is because of the lack of clouds that the saying "It is too cold to snow" came about.
That does not in any way mean the statement is correct, just a common held theory on why it is used.
Dave Mac
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
The maximum snow conditions are when the temperature is just cold enough to form snow. Warm air holds more water vapour than colder air.
When the air temp gets really cold, water vapour content decreases, and there is less precipitation. Hence the snowflake sizes become smaller. So it may snow heavily at + 2 deg, but much less at - 2deg.
Hence, even at -5 to -7 deg C, the snow is in the form of tiny shards of ice. There is much less deposition.
Also, when the ambient temp is really low, there is less air rise from the ground, hence little movement of ground source water vapour. This condition further decreases snow deposition.
To answer the question, it can't be too cold to snow.It just depends on when you stop calling it snow.
Pray for cold weather, but not too cold!
When the air temp gets really cold, water vapour content decreases, and there is less precipitation. Hence the snowflake sizes become smaller. So it may snow heavily at + 2 deg, but much less at - 2deg.
Hence, even at -5 to -7 deg C, the snow is in the form of tiny shards of ice. There is much less deposition.
Also, when the ambient temp is really low, there is less air rise from the ground, hence little movement of ground source water vapour. This condition further decreases snow deposition.
To answer the question, it can't be too cold to snow.It just depends on when you stop calling it snow.
Pray for cold weather, but not too cold!
Trencher
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
On the other hand, generally the colder it is, the more snow you get for an equivalent precipitation coming down as rain. Wet snow might be a 5:1 ratio, 10:is average, 30:1 for extremely dry snow.
because I'm so inclined .....
Iceman
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
That explains it! On the GFS graphs it says rain in mm and snow in cm
So '5' is 5mm of rain or 5cm of snow :D
So '5' is 5mm of rain or 5cm of snow :D
The Northern Monkey. Jan'23 Les Arcs
Edited 1 time. Last update at 23-Dec-2011
Trencher
reply to 'Another snow question' posted Dec-2011
and just a few hundred feet of elevation can make the difference between precip that falls as rain or falls as snow.
because I'm so inclined .....
Topic last updated on 24-December-2011 at 04:22