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Drizzle is a light rain precipitation consisting of liquid water drops smaller than those of rain, and generally smaller than 0.5 mm (0.02 in.) in diameter. Drizzle is normally produced by low stratiform clouds and stratocumulus clouds. Precipitation rates due to drizzle are on the order of a millimetre per day or less at the ground. Owing to the small size of drizzle drops, under many circumstances drizzle largely evaporates before reaching the surface, and so may be undetected by observers on the ground. The METAR code for drizzle is DZ.

Contents

Effects

While most drizzle has only a minor immediate impact upon humans, Freezing drizzle can lead to treacherous conditions. Freezing drizzle occurs when supercooled drizzle drops land on a surface whose temperature is below freezing. These drops immediately freeze upon impact leading to the buildup of sheet ice on the surface of roads, and very heavy accumulations of ice on power lines, both of which have major impacts.

Occurrence

Drizzle tends to be the most frequent form of precipitation over large areas of the world's oceans, particularly in the colder regions of the subtropics. These regions are dominated by shallow marine stratocumulus and trade wind cumulus clouds, which exist entirely within the marine boundary layer. Despite the low rates of surface accumulation, it is becoming apparent that drizzle actually exerts a major influence over the cloud structure, coverage, and radiative properties in these regions. This has motivated scientists to design more sophisticated, sensitive instruments such as high frequency radars that can detect drizzle. These studies have shown that the quantity of drizzle is strongly linked to cloud morphology and tends to be associated with updrafts within the marine boundary layer. Increased amounts of drizzle tend to be found in marine clouds that form in clean airmasses that have low concentrations of cloud droplets. This interconnection between clouds and drizzle can be explored using high resolution numerical modeling such as large eddy simulation.

Influence of aerosols

It has been hypothesized that increasing the amounts of particulates in the atmosphere through human activities may lead to a suppression of drizzle. According to this hypothesis, because drizzle can be an effective means of removing moisture from a cloud, its suppression could help to increase the thickness, coverage, and longevity of marine stratocumulus clouds. This would lead to increased cloud albedo on the regional to global scale, and a cooling of the planet. Estimates using complex global climate models suggest that this effect may be partially masking the effects of greenhouse gas increases on the global surface temperature. However, it is not clear that the representation of the chemical and physical processes needed to accurately simulate the interaction between aerosols, clouds, and drizzle in our current climate models is sufficient to fully understand the global impacts of changes in particulates.

Field Studies

The forthcoming VAMOS Ocean-Cloud-Atmosphere-Land Study (VOCALS [1]) will focus upon drizzle processes and their impact upon climate.

See also

References


Source material

Up to date as of January 22, 2010

From Wikisource

Drizzle
by Paul Laurence Dunbar
Information about this edition
In the 1913 collection of his work, The Complete Poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar

                   DRIZZLE

Hit 's been drizzlin' an' been sprinklin',
  Kin' o' techy all day long.
I ain't wet enough fu' toddy,
  I 's too damp to raise a song,
An' de case have set me t'inkin',
  Dat dey 's folk des lak de rain,
Dat goes drizzlin' w'en dey's talkin',
  An' won't speak out flat an' plain.

Ain't you nevah set an' listened
  At a body 'splain his min'?
W'en de t'oughts dey keep on drappin'
  Was n't big enough to fin'?
Dem 's whut I call drizzlin' people,
  Othahs call 'em mealy mouf,
But de fust name hits me bettah,
  Case dey nevah tech a drouf.

Dey kin talk from hyeah to yandah,
  An' f'om yandah hyeah ergain,
An' dey don' mek no mo' 'pression,
  Den dis powd'ry kin' o' rain.
En yo' min' is dry ez cindahs,
  Er a piece o' kindlin' wood,
'T ain't no use a-talkin' to 'em,
  Fu' dey drizzle ain't no good.

Gimme folks dat speak out nachul,
  Whut 'll say des whut dey mean,
Whut don't set dey wo'ds so skimpy
  Dat you got to guess between.
I want talk des' lak de showahs
  Whut kin wash de dust erway,
Not dat sprinklin' convusation,
  Dat des drizzle all de day.

PD-icon.svg This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

Simple English

Drizzle is the name given to light rain. The drop size of drizzle is smaller than that of rain, about 0.5 mm (millimeters) in diameter.[needs proof]









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