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7.3: Precipitation Types

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    46237
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    The ice phase process accounts for most global precipitation. The term precipitation refers to all types of precipitation—from fog, rain, snow, hail, etc. Anything composed of water that is falling in the atmosphere can be called precipitation. However, we know that not everywhere in the world gets snow all the time. While the ice phase process helps with precipitation formation, many things can happen to falling drops along their journey from the cloud to the ground. Here are a few examples.

    Rain: Ice crystals melt before they hit the ground.

    Snow: Ice crystals collide and stick, forming a fully grown ice crystal, and falling to the ground as a snowflake.

    Graupel: Ice crystals collide and stick with other ice crystals forming clumps of snow called graupel.

    Sleet: A mixture of rain and snow, formed by partial melting.

    Freezing Rain: Supercooled liquid rain that freezes on impact with the surface.

    Ice Pellets: Ice crystals melt before they hit the ground, refreeze in a cold layer, usually just above the surface, and end up falling as frozen rain drops.

    Hail: Ice crystals that repeatedly pass through a supercooled liquid region of cloud where riming builds up on the hydrometeor. The formation of hail requires strong updrafts and a relatively long time inside of a cloud.

    As you can see, the journey of an ice crystal after formation is not always straightforward and depends strongly on the environmental conditions, especially temperature. In the following chapters (especially chapter 12), we will learn how airmasses and fronts combine together regularly in Earth’s atmosphere to create conditions that are conducive to all types of precipitation.

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    Precipitation changes associated with the passage of a warm front (Public Domain).

    The above image provides an example of how a warm front creates temperature gradients in the atmosphere that produces precipitation types from rain, freezing rain, sleet, and snow depending on your location with respect to the front.

    Chapter 7: Questions to Consider

    1. Which rain formation process produces most of the worlds precipitation? What type of cloud does this process occur in?
    2. What factors determine how large a cloud droplet can grow through collision-coalescence?
    3. Match the ice nucleation methods:

    Query \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    1. Query \(\PageIndex{2}\)

    Selected Practice Question Answers:

    Query \(\PageIndex{3}\)


    7.3: Precipitation Types is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.