|
Sleet can refer to at least two different forms of precipitation. In Britain and other Commonwealth countries, sleet refers to snow that has partially melted on its fall to the ground, due to surrounding air that is sufficiently warm to partially melt it while falling, but not warm enough to fully melt it into rain. Thus it refers to partially melted droplets, a mixture of snow and rain. It does not tend to form a layer on the ground, unless the ground has a temperature that is below freezing, when it can form a dangerous layer of invisible ice on surfaces known as 'black ice'. This similarly occurs when rain freezes upon contact with the ground (freezing rain). The METAR code for this usage is SNRA or RASN, depending on how much melting has occurred. Animation of snowcover changing with the seasons. ...
Rain falling For other uses see Rain (disambiguation). ...
In physics and chemistry, freezing is the process of cooling a liquid to the temperature (called freezing point) where it turns solid. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Original meaning in New England Black ice in northern New England traditionally referred to a clear form of pond ice that forms in very cold weather. ...
A shrub coated by glaze after a night of freezing rain. ...
METAR is a format for reporting weather information. ...
In American usage, sleet is a form of precipitation consisting of tiny frozen raindrops, or ice pellets. This is often mistaken for hail, but forms in a different fashion and is usually (but not always) smaller. This occurs when snow flakes falling through a small layer of warmer air in the atmosphere will begin to melt. They can then refreeze if they pass back into a layer of colder, sub-freezing air closer to the ground, resulting in little balls of ice. These ice balls may bounce when they hit the ground, and do not freeze into a solid mass unless mixed with freezing rain. Sleet is not to be confused with soft hail, which forms through another process. The METAR code for ice pellets is PL. English language spread in the United States. ...
Look up Hail, hail in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
A shrub coated by glaze after a night of freezing rain. ...
Soft hail is a form of precipitation where snow flakes partially melt on falling into warmer air forming sleet with the loss of their flake structure, and then re-freeze on passing back into colder air to form amorphous or semi-crystalline pellets of snow. ...
METAR is a format for reporting weather information. ...
References This article or section does not cite its references or sources. You can help Wikipedia by introducing appropriate citations. See also |