3 cm of snow equals 3 mm of rain depending on what kind of snow. but typically that is the amount.
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
If too much rain falls you will have tons of floods. If too much snow falls at once it will become a blizzard.
yes snow is rain and rain is snow because the snow turn it rain when the sun is out and rain turn to snow when the wind is blowing hard.
The fluffiness of the snow can vary how deep it is compared to an inch of rain. On average, however, ten inches of snow is an inch of rain, so .04 inches of rain is similar to .4 inches of snow.
It can vary a lot - a common figure would be about half an inch of rain, but you could have an inch of water with very wet snow.
it gets both equal rain and snow
Roughly ten. It varies a little with the type of snow.
Rain falls much faster than snow. Snow has much more air resistance than raindrops.
rain gauge
In excess of 500 in. of rain
not much it's like the weather of the rain not to much rain to
False; the "or" is an additive property so the probability of rain or snow muse be greater than or equal to 0.65.
About 37.03 inches of rain per year.
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
If too much rain falls you will have tons of floods. If too much snow falls at once it will become a blizzard.
none
Tropical rainforests never get snow. Mid-latitude rain forests, such as in southeastern Alaska, get many feet annually.