'Freezing Rain' is a type of precipitation that begins as
snow at higher altitude, falling from a
cloud towards earth, melts completely on its way down while passing through a layer of air above freezing temperature, and then encounters a layer below freezing at lower level to become
supercooled. This water will then
freeze upon impact of any object it then encounters.
[1] The ice can accumulate to a thickness of several
centimetres, called
glaze ice. The
METAR code for freezing rain is FZRA.
[2] (see
freezing drizzle for another way of forming ice
accretion)
Mechanism

Detail of ice clad leaves
Usually freezing rain is associated with the approach of a
warm front when cold air, at or below freezing temperature, is trapped in the lower levels of the atmosphere as warmth streams in aloft.
[3] This happens, for instance, when a low pressure system moves from the
Mississippi River Valley toward the
Appalachian mountains and the
Saint Lawrence River Valley of
North America, in the cold season, and there is a strong high pressure system sitting further East. The warm air from the
Gulf of Mexico is often the fuel for freezing precipitation.
The warm air is then forced aloft where it dramatically alters the
temperature in the middle layer, around 800
mbar (800
hPa). If the
advection is strong enough to warm a thin layer several degrees above 0 °C for a brief period or a larger one slightly above 0 °C for a long period, the falling
snow into this layer will melt and become
rain droplets. These will freeze on contact when they hit the ground, which is still at or below 0 °C.
Observations
Surface observations by manned or automatic stations are the only direct confirmation of freezing rain. One can never ''see'' directly freezing rain, rain or snow on
weather radars,
Doppler or conventional. However, it is possible to estimate the area covered by freezing rain with
radars indirectly.
The intensity of the radar echoes (
reflectivity) is proportional to the form (water or ice) of the
precipitation and its diameter. In fact, rain has much stronger reflective power than snow but its diameter is much smaller. So the reflectivity of rain coming from melted snow is only slightly higher. However, in the layer where the snow is melting, the wet flakes still have a large diameter and are coated with water so the returns to the radar is much stronger.
The presence of this
brightband indicates that there is a warm layer above ground where snow melts. This could be producing rain on the ground or the possibility of freezing rain if the temperature is below freezing. This
artifact can be located, like on the image at left, with a cross-section through radar data. The height and slope of the brightband will give clues to the extent of the region where melting occurs. Then it is possible to associate this clue with surface observations and numerical models prediction to produce output such as the ones seen on television weather programs that divide radar echoes into rain, mixed and snow precipitations.
Effects

Iced power lines threaten power outage to many

Ice glaze on crabapple
Freezing rain often causes major power outages. Power lines coated with ice become extremely heavy, causing support poles, insulators and lines to break. Tree limbs with branches heavily coated in ice also can break off under the enormous weight and fall onto power lines. The ice that forms on roadways makes vehicle travel dangerous. Unlike snow, wet ice provides almost no traction, and vehicles will slide even on gentle slopes. Because freezing rain does not hit the ground as an ice pellet and is still a rain droplet when it makes contact with the ground, the freezing rain conforms to the shape of the ground, making one thick layer of
ice, often called glaze. Because sleet is in pellet form it can be easily moved around, unlike freezing rain which is a continuous layer of ice and cannot be moved around.
Freezing rain and glaze measured on a large scale is called an
ice storm. Effects on plants can be severe, as they cannot support the weight of the
ice. Trees may snap as they are dormant and fragile during
winter weather. Pine trees are also victims of ice storms as their needles will catch the
ice, but not be able to support the weight.
One particularly severe ice storm struck eastern
Canada and northern parts of
New York and
New England in January of 1998; for details see
1998 Ice Storm.
In
1994,
American Eagle Flight 4184 encountered heavy air traffic and poor weather that postponed the arrival of this flight at
Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport, where it was to have landed en route from
Indianapolis, Indiana. The ATR-72, a twin-engine turboprop carrying 68 people, entered a holding pattern 65 miles southeast of O'Hare. As the plane circled, freezing rain formed a ridge of ice formed on the upper surface of its wings, eventually causing the aircraft's autopilot to suddenly disconnect and the pilots to lose control. The ATR disintegrated on impact with a field below, killing everyone aboard
See also
★
1998 Ice Storm
★
Freezing drizzle
★
Hail
★
Sleet
★
Wintry showers
References
1. Glossary of Meteorology. F. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
2. National Weather Service Forecast Office, La Crosse, Wisconsin. Significant Weather Phenomena Matrix. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
3. University of Illinois. Cyclones and Fronts: the development of freezing rain. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
External links
★
Canadian ice storm of 1998
★
Climatology of freezing rain
★
Video of Ice-storm