News1 min ago
Mist or Fog
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Can someone tell me what the difference is between mist and fog
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Not sure you're correct there TartanWizard. Fog is defined as "Condensed water vapor in cloudlike masses lying close to the ground and limiting visibility" While mist: "A mass of fine droplets of water in the atmosphere near or in contact with the earth" I seem to remember from GCSE geography that the meteorological distinction is in the amount it limits visability, I might go and have a look on the met office website see if the know
They are both probably right to some degree. :)
When you think about it, water vapour that is 'mist' which technically lies 'near to the surface of the earth', then it will likley not restrict your vision by more than 1 km, where as, 'fog', which (rises from and) lies on the ground, will almost certainly restrict vision more than mist will. Of course, under extreme conditions, or in mountainous areas, the 'distance' rule is probably better to help describe the situation, where clouds would form mist on the 'ground', even though that ground was much higher than then valley below it.