Snow, sleet and freezing rain: What determines type of winter precipitation?

Winter weather brings a variety of different types of precipitation. As the temperature profile of the atmosphere changes from the cloud to the ground, the type of precipitation can change too.

The first, and most obvious type of winter precipitation, is snow. Snow occurs when from the cloud to the ground, temperatures are below freezing. Simple enough, right?

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Things become a little more complicated when layers of warm and cold air interact with the snow.

The next type of winter precipitation is sleet. Sleet is formed when snow falls into a warmer layer of air with temperatures above freezing. This causes the snowflakes to melt into rain. The rain droplets then fall into another deep cold layer with temperatures below freezing. This causes the rain droplets to freeze into small ice pellets known as sleet.

Finally, and often the most dangerous type of winter precipitation, is freezing rain. Freezing rain occurs when snowflakes fall into a warm layer of air causing them to melt into rain droplets. Similarly to how sleet is formed, the rain droplets then fall into a cold layer of air. However, instead of fully freezing in a deep layer of cold air, the raindrops are super-cooled in a shallow layer of cold air.

While the droplets do not freeze into pellets, they do reach freezing temperatures. As a result, the droplets quickly freeze on contact with any surface with a temperature at or below freezing. In the worst cases, freezing rain can leave a crippling coat of ice on cars and tree branches and cause widespread power outages.

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