Thursday, February 11, 2021

The Way Things Work In Winter

Remember that my theory of liquid water explains so many of the physical mysteries of winter. It is on the meteorology and biology blog, the compound posting "Water Made Really Simple".

We know that cumulus and stratus clouds are composed of water droplets. So why don't the clouds freeze when the temperature is below freezing? See the section, "Cloud Droplets, Temperature And, Water".

Why does every snowflake seem to have a pattern that is different from every other snowflake?

Why are the ridges on icicles exactly one centimeter apart? For both of these questions see the section, "The Electric Snowflake And Icicle Hypothesis".

I rarely check the weather forecast. I live near a really tall smokestack and just look at the direction of the wind. It is important that the smoke be high up because the wind direction at ground level can be deceptive. If the wind is from the north it will get colder, if from the south it will get warmer. The prevailing wind where I live is from the west, which will likely bring a change in weather although probably not a great change in temperature. The worst conditions are usually when the wind is from the east, usually due to remnants of great storms along America's east coast, which have the power to reverse the prevailing wind.

Here is a link to the theory:

http://markmeeklife.blogspot.com/2012/11/water-made-really-simple.html?m=0

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