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.
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
One inch of rainfall on one acre is equivalent to 27,154 gallons of water. Therefore, four inches of rain on an acre would be equal to 108,616 gallons of water.
The type of precipitation that occurs when 6 inches of snow (moist) or 30 inches of snow (dry) is equivalent to 1 inch of rain is considered the snow-water equivalent. This measurement helps in determining the amount of liquid water that would result if the snow melted completely.
To convert milliliters (ml) to inches, we need to know the diameter of the rain gauge collector. The formula to convert ml to inches will depend on the collector diameter and the conversion factor for the collector surface area. The conversion factor will vary for different rain gauge designs.
This will depend on how cold it is, but on average 10 inches of snow = 1 inch of rain, so 0.15 inches of rain = 1.5 inches of snow. It could be less than in inch of wet snow, or more than 2 inches of powder, however.
A foot of rain is the same as twelve inches of rain.
An inch is a unit of distance, not a specific amount. Therefore, 3 inches is always equal to 3 inches.
one third a cup
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
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.
One inch of rainfall on one acre is equivalent to 27,154 gallons of water. Therefore, four inches of rain on an acre would be equal to 108,616 gallons of water.
How many inches of rain does Asia get a year?
0.86 + 1.52 = 2.38 inches of rain.
It would take 12 inches, to rain 12 inches.
The general rule of thumb is that 1 inch of rain is roughly equivalent to about 10 inches of snow, depending on factors like temperature and humidity. Therefore, 0.2 inches of rain would typically equal about 2 inches of snow. However, this ratio can vary, with wetter snow resulting in a lower snow-to-rain ratio.
54 inches of precipitation
10 Inches a Year