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Snow

For other use, see snow (disambiguation).

Snow, a form of precipitation, is a crystalline form of water ice, consisting of a multitude of snowflakes. Since it is composed of small rough particles, it has an open and therefore soft structure, unless packed by external pressure. It is commonly formed when water vapor sublimates high in the atmosphere and then falls to the ground. Very light snow falling is called flurries or just a flurry.

Snow can be also manufactured using snow cannons, which actually create tiny granules more like sleet. (This is sometimes called "grits" by those in the southern U.S. for its likeness to the texture of the food.)

winter wonderland.jpg

Snowfall varies by time and location, including geographic latitude, elevation and other factors which affect weather in general. In latitudes closer to the equator, there is less chance of snow fall, 35 degrees of northern and southern latitude often quoted as a rough delimiter. The western coasts of the major continents remain snowless to much higher latitudes.

Some mountains, even at or near the equator, have permanent snow cover on their top, including Mauna Kea in Hawaii. Conversely, many regions of the Arctic and Antarctic receive very little precipitation and therefore little snow, despite the bitter cold.

The highest seasonally cumulative precipitation of snow was measured on Mount Baker during 1998-1999 season when they received 1,140 inches; this surpassed the previous record holder, Mount Rainier which during 1971-1972 season received (a thousand inches)of snow; and the highest daily precipitation was recorded in Colorado in 1921 (76 inches).

Substantial snowfall sometimes disrupts infrastructure and services even in regions that are accustomed to them. Traffic may be snarled or even completely stop. Basic infrastructure such as electricity and gas supply can be shut down. A snow day is a day on which school or other services are cancelled owing to unusually heavy snowfall. In areas that normally have very little snow, this may occur even with light accumulation — something often made fun of by those people used to colder climates, where streets would remain passable given the same amount of snow.

Forms of recreation dependant on snow:

  • many winter sports, such as skiing and snowboarding
  • playing with a sled or riding in a sleigh
  • building a snowman or snow fort
  • throwing snowballs mutually in a snowball fight or at others to tease them. (Humans seems to be the only animal that throw their snowballs. Pygme chimpanses has been seen carrying snowballs around, but never to throw them..)

Where snow is scarce but the temperature is low enough, snow cannons may be used to produce an adequate amount for such sports.

Tightly packed snow may be used as a construction material in, for example, Inuit snow houses.

snow2811.png

An interesting question is why the arms of snowflakes are symmetrical, and why no two snowflakes appear to be identical. The answer is believed to be due to the fact that the distances between snowflakes are much greater than the distances across snowflakes.

Given the initial six-fold symmetry from the crystal structure of ordinary ice (known as ice Ih), the arms of a snowflake grow independently in an environment that is believed to be rapidly varying in temperature, humidity and so on. This environment is believed to be relatively spatially homogenous on the scale of a single flake, leading to the arms growing to a high level of visual similarity by responding in identical ways to identical conditions, much in the same way that unrelated trees respond to environmental changes by growing near-identical sets of tree rings. The difference in the environment in scales larger than a snowflake leads to the observed lack of correlation between the shapes of different snowflakes.

However, the concept that no two snowflakes are alike is incorrect: it is entirely possible, but unlikely, that a pair of snowflakes may be visually identical if their environments were similar enough, either because they grew very near one another, or simply by chance. The American Meteorological Society has reported that matching snow crystals were discovered by Nancy Knight of the National Center for Atmospheric Research. The crystals were not flakes in the usual sense but rather hollow hexagonal prisms.

See also

External Links

Referenced By

El Eternauta | Lahar | List of Conservation topics | Meteorological phenomena | Meteorological phenomenon | Rock musical | Rock opera | Snowflake | Spring (season) | Sublimation (chemistry) | Weather related fatalities | WikiProject Conservation worldwide

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Snow".

 

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