ChatterBank2 mins ago
Too Cold To Snow?
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I've always been taught that it obviously CAN be too cold to snow, because snow generally only falls when it's between -2 and +2. Below -2 (in the air) it falls as ice/hail and above +2 it melts and falls as rain. Lots of people argue with me, but never really have a valid point. One thing they often say is that it snows in Antarctica, and it's colder than -2 there, but we all know that the snow there is mostly just settled ice/snow being blown around by strong winds. So can anyone offer a valid reason why/when/how it CAN'T be too cold to snow?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you are right and wrong indie. air temperature is imprtant, but not on the grouund. consider that most hail in the uk falls in july!. It is about cloud temperature. average ground temp in the steppes of russia in winter is about -20 and i assure you it snows there. lots. The point is whether there is a temp inversion as stated above. IN the uk the statement has some validity as you need a low pressure area for precipitation, and this tends to raise local temperatures.
for snow to form one must satisfy the following conditions: A temperature below 0 celsius pervading all the way from cloud to ground; a saturated vapour content of the air (normally consequent on a cloud temperature drop); nucleation sources (dust preferably).
If all of these can be satisfied then snow will fall. Prolonged cold weather lowers the air moisture content, hence the antarctic desert phenomenon. BUT cold itself does not preclude snow.