Mechanisms of precipitation release
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Growing clouds are sustained by upward air currents, which may vary in strength from a few centimetres per second to several metres per second. Considerable growth of the cloud droplets (with falling speeds of only about 1 cm, or 0.4 inch, per second) is therefore necessary if they are to fall through the cloud, survive evaporation in the unsaturated air below, and reach the ground as drizzle or rain. The production of a few large particles from a large population of much smaller ones may be achieved in one of two ways. The first of these depends on the fact that cloud droplets are seldom of uniform size; droplets form on nuclei of various sizes and grow under slightly different conditions and for different lengths of time in different parts of the cloud. A droplet appreciably larger than average will fall faster than the smaller ones and so will collide and fuse (coalesce) with some of those that it overtakes. Calculations show that, in a deep cloud containing strong upward air currents and high concentrations of liquid water, such a droplet will have a sufficiently long journey among its smaller neighbours to grow to raindrop size. This coalescence mechanism is responsible for the showers that fall in tropical and subtropical regions from clouds whose tops do not reach altitudes where air temperatures are below 0 °C (32 °F) and therefore cannot contain ice crystals. Radar evidence also suggests that showers in temperate latitudes may sometimes be initiated by the coalescence of waterdrops, although the clouds may later reach heights at which ice crystals may form in their upper parts.
The second method of releasing precipitation can operate only if the cloud top reaches elevations at which air temperatures are below 0 °C and the droplets in the upper cloud regions become supercooled. At temperatures below −40 °C (−40 °F), the droplets freeze automatically or spontaneously. At higher temperatures, they can freeze only if they are infected with special minute particles called ice nuclei. The origin and nature of these nuclei are not known with certainty, but the most likely source is clay-silicate particles carried up from the ground by the wind. As the temperature falls below 0 °C, more and more ice nuclei become active, and ice crystals appear in increasing numbers among the supercooled droplets. Such a mixture of supercooled droplets and ice crystals is unstable, however. The cloudy air is usually only slightly supersaturated with water vapour with respect to the droplets and is strongly oversaturated with respect to ice crystals; the latter thus grow more rapidly than the droplets. After several minutes, the growing crystals acquire falling speeds of tens of centimetres per second, and several of them may become joined to form a snowflake. In falling into the warmer regions of the cloud, this flake may melt and hit ground as a raindrop.
The deep, extensive, multilayer cloud systems, from which precipitation of a widespread persistent character falls, are generally formed in cyclonic depressions (lows) and near fronts. Cloud systems of this type are associated with feeble upcurrents of only a few centimetres per second that last for at least several hours. Although the structure of these great rain-cloud systems is being explored by aircraft and radar, it is not yet well understood. That such systems rarely produce rain, as distinct from drizzle, unless their tops are colder than about −12 °C (10 °F) suggests that ice crystals are mainly responsible. This view is supported by the fact that the radar signals from these clouds usually take a characteristic form that has been clearly identified with the melting of snowflakes.
Showers, thunderstorms, and hail
Precipitation from shower clouds and thunderstorms, whether in the form of raindrops, pellets of soft hail, or true hailstones, is generally of great intensity and shorter duration than that from layer clouds and is usually composed of larger particles. The clouds are characterized by their large vertical depth, strong vertical air currents, and high concentrations of liquid water, all factors favouring the rapid growth of precipitation elements by the accretion of cloud droplets.
In a cloud composed wholly of liquid water, raindrops may grow by coalescence. For example, a droplet being carried up from the cloud base grows as it ascends by sweeping up smaller droplets. When it becomes too heavy to be supported by the upcurrents, the droplet falls, continuing to grow by the same process on its downward journey. Finally, if the cloud is sufficiently deep, the droplet will emerge from its base as a raindrop.
In a dense, vigorous cloud several kilometres deep, the drop may attain its limiting stable diameter (about 6 mm [0.2 inch]) before reaching the cloud base and thus will break up into several large fragments. Each of these may continue to grow and attain breakup size. The number of raindrops may increase so rapidly in this manner that after a few minutes the accumulated mass of water can no longer be supported by the upcurrents and falls as a heavy shower. These conditions occur more readily in tropical regions. In temperate regions where the freezing level (0 °C) is much lower in elevation, conditions are more favourable for the ice-crystal mechanism.
The hailstones that fall from deep, vigorous clouds in warm weather consist of a core surrounded by several alternate layers of clear and opaque ice. When the growing particle traverses a region of relatively high air temperature or high concentration of liquid water, or both, the transfer of heat from the hailstone to the air cannot occur rapidly enough to allow all of the deposited water to freeze immediately. This results in the formation of a wet coating of slushy ice, which may later freeze to form a layer of compact, relatively transparent ice. If the hailstone then enters a region of lower temperature and lower water content, the impacting droplets may freeze individually to produce ice of relatively low density with air spaces between the droplets. The alternate layers are formed as the stone passes through regions in which the combination of air temperature, liquid-water content, and updraft speed allows alternately wet and dry growth.
It is held by some authorities that lightning is closely associated with the appearance of precipitation, especially in the form of soft hail, and that the charge and the strong electric fields are produced by ice crystals or cloud droplets striking and bouncing off the undersurfaces of the hail pellets. For a detailed discussion of electrical effects in clouds, see below thunderstorms.