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Home / Weather / Weather's Wild Whim: Kilometers Decide Snow or Ice

Weather's Wild Whim: Kilometers Decide Snow or Ice

30 Nov

•

Summary

  • A storm's track determines precipitation type: snow, rain, or ice.
  • Just a few kilometers can shift conditions from snow to ice.
  • A slight 1°C temperature change drastically alters precipitation outcome.
Weather's Wild Whim: Kilometers Decide Snow or Ice

The precise track of a winter storm dictates whether communities experience snow, rain, ice pellets, or freezing rain. Even a slight deviation of a few kilometers can dramatically change precipitation types, leading to vastly different impacts on travel and infrastructure. Atmospheric temperatures at different altitudes play a crucial role, with a pocket of above-freezing air often responsible for ice formation.

Cold air typically circles the northern and western sides of low-pressure systems, while warmer air is drawn into the eastern and southern quadrants. This general pattern means snow often falls to the north of a storm's center, rain to the south, and a mixed bag of wintry conditions to the east. The transition zone between these precipitation types can be extremely narrow, mere kilometers wide.

Forecasting these nuanced conditions presents a challenge for meteorologists. A small shift in a storm's path can move this transition zone, causing communities expecting snow to receive ice, or vice versa. Understanding these complexities is crucial, especially for regions like Ontario, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada, where such forecasts are particularly impactful and uncertain.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
A storm's path is critical; a slight shift can change snow to ice or rain, impacting different regions within Canada.
Snowflakes falling through a warm layer above freezing then re-freezing near the ground cause ice pellets and freezing rain.
Small atmospheric temperature variations and precise storm tracks create uncertainty, making exact precipitation type predictions difficult.

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