it can be anything below 0 degrees Celsius but cannot be hotter than 43 Fahrenheit
That question is hard to answer, but the temperature on a snowy day could range maybe from -10 degrees to +2 degrees.
0°C, is the temperature for freezing. Although that snow can fall, it would be more likely below that temperature. (32°F = 0°C) ChaCha! (Just kidding)
snow cant be "made" at 2 degrees Celsius, but is can snow in temperatures of 2 degrees Celsius, the snow itself would have been made in sub zero temperatures, higher aloft, and fallen into the warmer air layer.
The temperature 25 degrees Celsius is quite warm, and you would expect that precipitation would be in the form of rain. It doesn't snow until it is zero Celsius or lower.
Snow.
Snow; -10°C = 14°F
32 degrees in farient (when snow/ice forms) is 0 in cellecius 32 degrees in farient (when snow/ice forms) is 0 in cellecius 32 degrees in farient (when snow/ice forms) is 0 in cellecius
snow cant be "made" at 2 degrees Celsius, but is can snow in temperatures of 2 degrees Celsius, the snow itself would have been made in sub zero temperatures, higher aloft, and fallen into the warmer air layer.
0 degrees celsius
Snow (0 degrees Celsius is 32 degrees Fahrenheit).
yes, in fact it has to be above zero degrees to snow on the ground.
for snow to be snow, not water, the temperature of the air has to be below 0 degrees Celsius (freezing point) and the ground has to be below 0 degrees Celsius.
0 degrees celsius
Yes.
The temperature 25 degrees Celsius is quite warm, and you would expect that precipitation would be in the form of rain. It doesn't snow until it is zero Celsius or lower.
Snow.
Around 0 oC.
About -2 -0 as the snow will not melt and not be to hard to throw at people
Snow; -10°C = 14°F