Thread: Freezing Rain
View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Old February 8th 12, 08:17 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Col Col is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
Posts: 4,367
Default Freezing Rain

Eskimo Will wrote:
"Alan" wrote in message
...
On Feb 8, 7:25 pm, "Col" wrote:
The local forecast was talking at length about freezing rain
this evening, and how unusual it is, so I am assuming that it
is to be of the genuine 'supercooled' varity, rather than
just 'normal' rain making cold surfaces slippery.

So what makes freezing rain fall at temperatures when
one would normaly expect snow?
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl


Snow will fall if the whole layer of air is sub-zero. But if the snow
hits a layer of air above zero it will start to melt. If this above
zero layer of air is deep enough it will turn the snow completely into
rain. If this rain then hits another layer of sub-zero air, for
instance a surface inversion, it will be cooled. If the surface
inversion is too shallow the rain won’t have a chance to drop below
zero, thus your 'normal' rain making cold surfaces slippery. If this
sub-zero layer is deep enough the rain’s temperature will have a
chance to drop below zero. Sometimes it will refreeze and give ice
pellets; sometime you will get proper super-cooled rain.
===============================================

Just to add to that excellent explanation that proper freezing rain
is when supercooled rain drops hit a cold surface and freeze
instantly on impact. Freezing rain is also called thus when ordinary
rain hits a frozen surface and freezes after a few minutes. That is
what is expected tomorrow.


I'm confused now.
So what is expected isn't the supercooled variety that freezes
instantaneously, but a rather severe version of 'normal' rain
falling upon a very cold surface?
I guess the meteorological semantics of it are irrelevant when
you are simply trying to warn of ice!
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl