There is only about five percent humidity in Antarctica.
Sometimes it does rain in the far north end of the Antarctic peninsula. 'Snow' is really blowing ice crystals and not snow at all.
I think it doesn't rain in Antarctica cause it addictive to snow
yes: you may think it is wet but no snow or rain has touched the ground in ages
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
Generally, in Antarctica, it's too cold to rain. Precipitation in the Antarctic Peninsula may fall as rain, but the amounts are nominal. Other precipitation on the continent may fall as snow or ice crystals. Average humidity on the continent is about five percent.
Antarctica is the coldest and driest continent on Earth, receiving very little precipitation each year. Rain is extremely rare in Antarctica due to its freezing temperatures, with most precipitation falling as snow. The majority of the continent's interior is considered a desert because of its low annual precipitation levels.
No, Antarctica is considered a desert because it has about NO rain and because it is the driest continent in the world. Even the snow can't melt to 5cm of water!
In Antarctica that would be snow. In other cold deserts, such as the Great Basin, summer brings rain while winter brings snow.
The frozen water in Antarctica is ice, not snow.
Standard tools include anemometer, perhaps a snow/rain gauge, thermometer and barometer.
The pink you see in Antarctica is a refraction of the available light. There is no natural 'pink snow' in Antarctica.
Precipitation is rain, water or snow and caused by the condensation of water in the atmosphere - in other words 'rain'.
You cant make it snow or rain. For snow you must be in a Tundra biome (the ones that are coverd in snow and have spruce trees) any time its raining, go over to that biome and it will be snowing!