Actually the width does not matter. The answer is that the same surface area will generate the same result. So a measuring cylinder that is 2 inches wide or 10 inches will will give the same result. Ten inches of snow will melt into one inch of water.
There isn't a direct conversion from rain to snow because the amount of snow produced from a certain amount of rain can vary depending on various factors such as temperature and humidity. As a rough estimate, 10 mm of rain can be roughly equivalent to about 1 cm of snow.
yes. In fact, the ratio averages about 10:1, so 10 cm snow is only about 1 cm rain.
Generally, 1 cm of rain (10mm) is equal to 10 cm of snow (100mm) because snow takes up about 10x the amount of space that rain does.
10" x 0.10 = 1"
10" of snow is 1" of water.
about 7 to 20
3 inches
one inch
10
The tundra gets at least 4-10 inches of rain a year
The tundra isn't defined by any amount of snowfall. It does, however, have very long winters and therefore snow can fall during most months. But in general, if it is very continental (dry) then less than 10 inches of snow might fall, while it may exceed 100 inches under the right conditions in a few places.
It is usually a range of between 3:1 and 10:1 So 20 cm of snow could equal 2 cm of liquid water.
10 mm = 1 cm
25.4 cm in 10 inches.
3 cm of snow equals 3 mm of rain depending on what kind of snow. but typically that is the amount.
The tundra gets at least 4-10 inches of rain a year
The water equivalent of snow varies, but as a general rule, 20 centimetres of freshly fallen snow is equivalent to 2 cm of rain. If the snow has been lying around for a while then its density will increase.
yes it will snow about 5 to 10 cm or more
49 inches of snow is 4 feet 1 inch. 5 inches of very wet snow is equal to 1 inch of rain, and 15 inches of dry powder snow is equal to 1 inch of rain, so the average snowfall is equal to 10 inches equals 1 inch of rain. So 49 inches of snow would be equal to about 5 inches of rain.
9 cm of rain
250 cm
Around 1 cm of water. Look under "Rainfall, snowfall, and precipitation" here: http://www.climate.weatheroffice.ec.gc.ca/prods_servs/glossary_e.html A 10 to 1 ratio of snow to water is used at most ordinary weather stations. However, the actual value can vary quite a bit depending on the density of the snow. The only way to get an accurate measurement will be to let the snow melt.
The tundra isn't defined by any amount of snowfall. It does, however, have very long winters and therefore snow can fall during most months. But in general, if it is very continental (dry) then less than 10 inches of snow might fall, while it may exceed 100 inches under the right conditions in a few places.
It is usually a range of between 3:1 and 10:1 So 20 cm of snow could equal 2 cm of liquid water.
A cm is 10 mm.
1 cm = 10 mm1 cm = 10 mm1 cm = 10 mm1 cm = 10 mm