A Freezing Fog Advisory will be issued when fog is present with temperatures below freezing, and the fog is expected to cause a thin layer of ice
Freezing fog is probably what you're thinking of.
A non-precipitation advisory can be for any number of conditions that are dangerous, but do not involve precipitation. These include warnings or watches for heat, high wind (which is probably your situation), dangerous wind chill, dense fog, smoke, blowing dust, volcanic ash, etc.
Sea smoke, also known as steam fog, is produced when cool air passes over warmer water. This can often result in hoar frost or freezing fog.
You want all 13? Here are the classics: Rain, Sleet, Snow, Hail, and Mixed. If you need the ones only a Meteorologist would love, then you have Snow Pellets, Snow Grains, Drizzle, Freezing Drizzle, Freezing Rain, Freezing Fog, Ice Crystals and good ol' Graupel (which would be a cool band name)! Tip of the hat to METAR. Cheers!
Steam fog and frontal fog
Freezing fog, advection fog, and evaporation fog!
snow
Freezing fog is probably what you're thinking of.
Because the fog would have to be a liquid for it to freeze.
'Rime' - the ice that you see stuck to trees in freezing fog.
In the northern region,where the cloud temperature and ground temperature remains below the freezing point,prcipitation occurs in the form of fog,mist and dew.
A non-precipitation advisory can be for any number of conditions that are dangerous, but do not involve precipitation. These include warnings or watches for heat, high wind (which is probably your situation), dangerous wind chill, dense fog, smoke, blowing dust, volcanic ash, etc.
Sea smoke, also known as steam fog, is produced when cool air passes over warmer water. This can often result in hoar frost or freezing fog.
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Fog or Clouds. Fog because fog is also called haze. And clouds because whats actually happening is the water droplets from your breath are slightly freezing. They freeze that fast because they're are so small and they are also mix with carbon dioxide coming out of your lungs.
Considering that air contains a huge number of water particles in it, no. Unless you are in the desert or it is below freezing, there are water particles in the air. If you breathe out in the cold you see a fog coming out of your mouth. That fog is cause by water particles you are breathing out.
Nathaniel B. Guttman has written: 'Study of worldwide occurrence of fog, thunderstorms, supercooled low clouds and freezing temperatures' -- subject(s): Charts, diagrams, Clouds, Fog, Low temperatures, Meteorology, Thunderstorms