The density of snow is variable. Wet snow or firn has a density which is almost 10 times that of freshly fallen flakes. Depending on its densit, a cubic yard of snow could weigh between 6700 poundals and 53800 poundals.
On average, 1 gallon of water would convert to roughly 0.133 cubic feet of snow if the snow's density is around 20 pounds per cubic foot. However, the exact conversion can vary based on factors such as the snow's density, moisture content, and temperature.
The weight of snow can vary depending on the density, which is affected by factors such as temperature and moisture content. On average, one gallon of snow weighs around 5-20 pounds. Therefore, 250 gallons of snow could weigh approximately 1250-5000 pounds.
It depends on what the soil contains. It may contain sand or gravel. It may contain water. It may contain little or much organic material. It may be highly or loosely compacted. On the average, however, the density of ideal topsoil is about 1.25 grams per cubic centimeter, or about 78 pounds per cubic foot.
No..Snow is frozen moisture, which means it was present as water before it became snow, so no change in weight is possible.
The weight of snow load varies depending on factors such as snow density and moisture content, but a common guideline is that fresh, powdery snow weighs about 5 to 15 pounds per cubic foot, while wet, heavy snow can weigh between 20 to 30 pounds per cubic foot. Building codes typically require consideration of specific snow load values to ensure structural safety, which can be significantly influenced by local climate and historical snowfall data. It is crucial for engineers and architects to account for these factors when designing structures in snow-prone areas.
On average, a cubic yard of snow can weigh anywhere from 500 to 800 pounds, depending on factors such as snow density and moisture content.
On average, 1 gallon of water would convert to roughly 0.133 cubic feet of snow if the snow's density is around 20 pounds per cubic foot. However, the exact conversion can vary based on factors such as the snow's density, moisture content, and temperature.
The weight of snow can vary depending on the density, which is affected by factors such as temperature and moisture content. On average, one gallon of snow weighs around 5-20 pounds. Therefore, 250 gallons of snow could weigh approximately 1250-5000 pounds.
It depends on what the soil contains. It may contain sand or gravel. It may contain water. It may contain little or much organic material. It may be highly or loosely compacted. On the average, however, the density of ideal topsoil is about 1.25 grams per cubic centimeter, or about 78 pounds per cubic foot.
No..Snow is frozen moisture, which means it was present as water before it became snow, so no change in weight is possible.
One cubic meter of snow typically contains between 100 to 300 liters of water, depending on the snow's density. Light, fluffy snow has a lower water content, while wet, heavy snow has a higher water content. On average, a common estimate is about 200 liters of water per cubic meter of snow.
Melted snow is water. Water, because it is a liquid, is hard to weigh as you normally only weigh solids. Liquids would have to be measured litres or gallons. So the answer to that question would depend on how much snow had actually melted- eg. 12% ice and 78 % is water and 10% is debris caught in the snow as it fell
Average Male: 7.7lb or 3.5kg Average Female: 6.4lb or 2.9kg
It depends on how much you have!! One shovelful of snow, for example, weighs less than the amount of snow on your driveway. I suspect what you are really asking is not how much snow weighs but how much it weighs per cubit foot or cubic yard. Weight per unit volume is called density. But even that is tricky with respect to snow. The density of snow varies greatly. Lightly packed powder weighs very little per cubic foot, whereas slushy, wet snow can weigh over 62 pounds per cubic foot -- about the density of water.
Snow is not uniform for density so you would have to weigh the cubic foot you are interested in. Each pound or kilogram would be composed of 1/9 hydrogen and 8/9 oxygen (by mass) since the molecular weight of water is 18, the atomic weight of hydrogen is 1 and the atomic weight of oxygen is 16. Based on 1 cubic foot of snow being about 10% the weight of a cubic foot of water, it would weigh approximately 6.25 pounds and contain about 5.56 pounds of oxygen.
18 cups, 4.5 quarts. A good average to figuring out snow to water ratio is 12-1. So there 1/12 of a cubic foot of snow will be the volume of water. An ounce is 1 inch sq. 12x12 is 144 cubic inches of water. 144 divided by 8 ounces to a cup is 18 cups. There fore 4.5 quarts.
Snow comes from clouds bearing the gaseous form of whatever the snow consists of. On Earth, the clouds bear moisture and the snow consists of frozen water. On the average, the flakes fall in a preferential direction because of the gravitational acceleration of the planet in proximity to which this is all happening. In space ... without clouds, gas, moisture, water, or a whole lot of gravity ... snow doesn't stand a chance.