HINT its a slang term for cocane.
At 0 degrees Celsius, precipitation can fall as snow, sleet, or freezing rain depending on factors like atmospheric conditions and the temperature profile in the atmosphere.
At 25 degrees Celsius, the most likely type of precipitation would be rain. Snow and sleet typically occur at temperatures below freezing (0 degrees Celsius), while hail usually forms within severe thunderstorms.
Yes, snow can freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to the ground as precipitation, so it can maintain its frozen state at temperatures at or below freezing.
At or below zero degrees C, the precipitation could be snow, hail, sleet, or graupel. (Graupel is formed when a snowflake hits a droplet of supercooled water which freezes around it. More like tiny slushballs than hail.) Above 0C, the precipitation is probably liquid water, or rain.
15 degrees Celsius below 0 is -15 degrees Celsius.
Rain is all I can find and think of
At 0 degrees Celsius, precipitation can come in the form of snow, rain, or a mix of both called sleet. The type of precipitation depends on the temperature profile of the atmosphere through which the precipitation is falling.
At 0 degrees Celsius, precipitation can fall as snow, sleet, or freezing rain depending on factors like atmospheric conditions and the temperature profile in the atmosphere.
The type of precipitation that forms when the air temperature is below 0 degrees Celsius is called snow.
At 25 degrees Celsius, the most likely type of precipitation would be rain. Snow and sleet typically occur at temperatures below freezing (0 degrees Celsius), while hail usually forms within severe thunderstorms.
Yes, snow can freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to the ground as precipitation, so it can maintain its frozen state at temperatures at or below freezing.
At or below zero degrees C, the precipitation could be snow, hail, sleet, or graupel. (Graupel is formed when a snowflake hits a droplet of supercooled water which freezes around it. More like tiny slushballs than hail.) Above 0C, the precipitation is probably liquid water, or rain.
This question is actually more complicated than it sounds. Water freezes at 0 degrees celcius. From 1° to 99° you'll have liquid water. So if the air temperature is 2° C you might expect liquid precipitation. But you might get a surprise when step out and see snow falling. Here's why. Precipitation falls through several thousand feet of air before you actually see it. If the air temp. near you is 2° C but the air from say above 1000 feet up to 9000 is -5° C you might get ice.
Blizzard
Nineteen degrees Celsius is a measure of temperature. It falls between the freezing point of water (0 degrees Celsius) and room temperature (around 20-25 degrees Celsius).
Snow, sleet, hail . . .
type "0 f to c" in google search it is -17.7777778 degrees Celsius