9: Hail Flashcards

1
Q

What is hail and properties

A
  • ball or lump of ice >5mm
  • Hail falls from cumulonimbus clouds
  • small/medium hailstones are spherical
  • large hailstones are oblate spheroidal
  • rough surface often with lobes
  • layered internal structure
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2
Q

Where was record canadian hailstone

A
  • Narrow Hills, Saskatchewan in 1973
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3
Q

How to know if possible hailstorm is coming

A
  • supercell
  • wall cloud: low cloud that develops beneath the base of a cumulonimbous cloud from which tornadoes can form
  • very dark cloud base
  • twoering cumulonimbus cloud
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4
Q

two types of clouds in thunderstorm

A
  • Seeder cloud: on top of feeder cloud
  • Cloud droplets fall from the seeder cloud into the feeder cloud and in that process will grow in size by collecting water vapor
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5
Q

Hailstone Growth - Stage 1

A
  • Hailstone growth begins in the feeder clouds in the flanking line
  • falling ice crystals collcet supercooled water droplets forming conical snow pellets called graupel
  • Graupel particles can melt to form large raindrops
  • Large raindrops and graupel particles are called hailstone embryos
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6
Q

Hailstone Growth - Transition

A
  • Graupel and large raindrops are entrained into the storm’s main updraft
  • Raindrops carried above the freezing level (Oc) become froezen raindrops
  • Graupel and frozen raindrops become the embryos of hailstones
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7
Q

Hailstone Growth - Stage 2

A
  • Hail embryos grow by accretion of supercooled cloud droplets in the main updraft
  • Conditions: temperature between 0 to -40C, liquid water content 1 to 10g/m^3, fallspeed 10 to 50m/s
  • Growth modes: dry, wet, spongy
  • Growth layers are the result of fluctuations in the liquid water content (LWC) –> more water = more growth
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8
Q

Growth Layers in Transmitted Light

A
  • In transmitted light, a hailstone’s thin section exhibits alternating light and dark layer
  • dark/black layers consist of ice containing large numbers of tiny air bubles –> dry growth
  • light/white layers consist of ice containing no bubbles or a few –>wet growth
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9
Q

Growth Layers in Crossed Polarizing Filters

A
  • Dark layers have small crystals –> dry growth
  • Light layers have large crystals –> wet growth
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10
Q

Growth Layers in Reflected Light

A
  • opposite of transmitted light
  • light layers consist of ice containing large numbers of tiny air bubles –> dry growth
  • dark layers consist of ice containing no bubbles or a few –>wet growth
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11
Q

3 ways to view hailstone layers

A
  1. transmitted light
  2. reflected light
  3. crossed polarizing filters
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12
Q

3 Types of Growth

A
  • wet
  • dry
  • spongy
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13
Q

What is dry growth

A
  • cloud droplets freeze individually on impact and pile up on hailstone surface
  • air trapped between cloud droplets forms numerous tiny air bubbles in ice –> called bubbly ice
  • requires hailstone temperature to be less than 0 C
  • high heat transfer, small mass flux
  • does not mean no water, just that there is no liquid water flowing over the hailstone surface
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14
Q

what is wet growth

A
  • cloud droplets spread over the hailstone surface on impact and don’t have time to freeze before the next droplet hits
  • a film of unfrozen liquid flows form lower surface where the cloud water impacts to the upper surface where it is shed –> called icicle lobes
  • as the liquid film freezes, air dissolved in the water comes out of solution, forming bubbles
  • the bubbles remain in the liquid and rae nto incorporated into the ice, giving clear ice
  • air temperature close to 0C and high liquid water content
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15
Q

What is spongy growth

A
  • if air temperature is very cold but liquid water content is high, dendritic ice crystals grow rapidly onto the surface liquid film, trapping unfrozne liquid within the ice
  • can be up to 50% liquid - mushy hail
  • as the trapped water freezes, air dissolved in the water comes out of the solution, forming air bubbles that can’t escape. This gives the ice a milky appearance
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16
Q

Relationship between hailstones and updrafts and terminal velocity

A
  • bigger updrafts = bigger hailstones
  • The terminal velocity of hail is: v = 12√D where D is hail diamter in cm and v is m/s (know this formula)
  • Umax (maximum hail size) = v = 12√D –> the D is the Umax
17
Q

kinetic energy formula

A

E = 1/2mv^2 where m is the mass of the hailstone

18
Q

Model of hailstreak development

A
  • Hail falls in a long narrow strip vertically
  • hailstreak: up and down, path in which hail falls
  • Hail swatch: width of hail streak
  • Wind shear from west to east
19
Q

how to know duration of hailstorm

A
  • formula: speed = distance/time
20
Q
A
21
Q

How to determine hailstone mass

A
  • mass = density x volume
  • ice has a density of 0.9g/cm^3
  • water has a density of 1g/cm^3