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Fog

Fog is a visible aerosol consisting of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air at or near the Earth's surface.[1][2] Fog can be considered a type of low-lying cloud usually resembling stratus, and is heavily influenced by nearby bodies of water, topography, and wind conditions. In turn, fog affects many human activities, such as shipping, travel, and warfare.

View from Blassenstein mountain near Scheibbs (Lower Austria) to the west, with fog over Erlauf valley and Danube
A massive fog bank over Twentynine Palms, California, covers the entire city as it begins to rise and join the clouds above it.
Fog dissipating over Koblenz, Germany

Fog appears when water vapor (water in its gaseous form) condenses. During condensation, molecules of water vapor combine to make tiny liquid water droplets that hang in the air. Sea fog, which shows up near bodies of saline water, is formed as water vapor condenses on bits of salt. Fog is similar to, but less transparent than, mist.

Definition

The term fog is typically distinguished from the more generic term cloud in that fog is low-lying, and the moisture in the fog is often generated locally (such as from a nearby body of water, like a lake or the ocean, or from nearby moist ground or marshes).[3]

By definition, fog reduces visibility to less than 1 km (0.62 mi), whereas mist causes lesser impairment of visibility.[4]

For aviation purposes in the United Kingdom, a visibility of less than 5 km (3.1 mi) but greater than 999 m (3,278 ft) is considered to be mist if the relative humidity is 95% or greater; below 95%, haze is reported.[5][full citation needed]

Formation

 
Minute droplets of water constitute this after-dark radiation fog, with an ambient temperature of −2 °C (28 °F). Their motion trails are captured as streaks.
 
A close-up view of water droplets forming fog. Those outside the camera lens's depth of field appear as orbs.

Fog forms when the difference between air temperature and dew point is less than 2.5 °C (4.5 °F).[6][7]

Fog begins to form when water vapor condenses into tiny water droplets that are suspended in the air. Some examples of ways that water vapor is added to the air are by wind convergence into areas of upward motion;[8] precipitation or virga falling from above;[9] daytime heating evaporating water from the surface of oceans, water bodies, or wet land;[10] transpiration from plants;[11] cool or dry air moving over warmer water;[12] and lifting air over mountains.[13] Water vapor normally begins to condense on condensation nuclei such as dust, ice, and salt in order to form clouds.[14][15] Fog, like its elevated cousin stratus, is a stable cloud deck which tends to form when a cool, stable air mass is trapped underneath a warm air mass.[16]

Fog normally occurs at a relative humidity near 100%.[17] This occurs from either added moisture in the air, or falling ambient air temperature.[17] However, fog can form at lower humidities, and can sometimes fail to form with relative humidity at 100%. At 100% relative humidity, the air cannot hold additional moisture, thus, the air will become supersaturated if additional moisture is added.

Fog commonly produces precipitation in the form of drizzle or very light snow. Drizzle occurs when the humidity of fog attains 100% and the minute cloud droplets begin to coalesce into larger droplets.[18] This can occur when the fog layer is lifted and cooled sufficiently, or when it is forcibly compressed from above by descending air. Drizzle becomes freezing drizzle when the temperature at the surface drops below the freezing point.

The thickness of a fog layer is largely determined by the altitude of the inversion boundary, which in coastal or oceanic locales is also the top of the marine layer, above which the air mass is warmer and drier. The inversion boundary varies its altitude primarily in response to the weight of the air above it, which is measured in terms of atmospheric pressure. The marine layer, and any fog-bank it may contain, will be "squashed" when the pressure is high, and conversely, may expand upwards when the pressure above it is lowering.

Types

Fog can form in a number of ways, depending on how the cooling that caused the condensation occurred.

Radiation fog is formed by the cooling of land after sunset by infrared thermal radiation in calm conditions with a clear sky. The cooling ground then cools adjacent air by conduction, causing the air temperature to fall and reach the dew point, forming fog. In perfect calm, the fog layer can be less than a meter thick, but turbulence can promote a thicker layer. Radiation fog occurs at night, and usually does not last long after sunrise, but it can persist all day in the winter months, especially in areas bounded by high ground. Radiation fog is most common in autumn and early winter. Examples of this phenomenon include tule fog.[19]

Ground fog is fog that obscures less than 60% of the sky and does not extend to the base of any overhead clouds.[20] However, the term is usually a synonym for shallow radiation fog; in some cases the depth of the fog is on the order of tens of centimetres over certain kinds of terrain with the absence of wind.

 
Advection fog layer in San Francisco with the Golden Gate Bridge and skyline in the background

Advection fog occurs when moist air passes over a cool surface by advection (wind) and is cooled.[21] It is common as a warm front passes over an area with significant snow-pack. It is most common at sea when moist air encounters cooler waters, including areas of cold water upwelling, such as along the California coast (see San Francisco fog). A strong enough temperature difference over water or bare ground can also cause advection fog.

Although strong winds often mix the air and can disperse, fragment, or prevent many kinds of fog, markedly warmer and humid air blowing over a snowpack can continue to generate advection fog at elevated velocities up to 80 km/h (50 mph) or more – this fog will be in a turbulent, rapidly moving, and comparatively shallow layer, observed as a few centimetres/inches in depth over flat farm fields, flat urban terrain and the like, and/or form more complex forms where the terrain is different such as rotating areas in the lee of hills or large buildings and so on.

Fog formed by advection along the California coastline is propelled onto land by one of several processes. A cold front can push the marine layer coast-ward, an occurrence most typical in the spring or late fall. During the summer months, a low-pressure trough produced by intense heating inland creates a strong pressure gradient, drawing in the dense marine layer. Also, during the summer, strong high pressure aloft over the desert southwest, usually in connection with the summer monsoon, produces a south to southeasterly flow which can drive the offshore marine layer up the coastline; a phenomenon known as a "southerly surge", typically following a coastal heat spell. However, if the monsoonal flow is sufficiently turbulent, it might instead break up the marine layer and any fog it may contain. Moderate turbulence will typically transform a fog bank, lifting it and breaking it up into shallow convective clouds called stratocumulus.

Evaporation fog or steam fog forms over bodies of water overlain by much colder air; this situation can also lead to the formation of steam devils, which look like their dust counterparts.[22] Lake effect fog is of this type, sometimes in combination with other causes like radiation fog. It tends to differ from most advective fog formed over land in that it is, like lake-effect snow, a convective phenomenon, resulting in fog that can be very dense and deep and looks fluffy from above.

Frontal fog forms in much the same way as stratus cloud near a front when raindrops, falling from relatively warm air above a frontal surface, evaporate into cooler air close to the Earth's surface and cause it to become saturated. This type of fog can be the result of a very low frontal stratus cloud subsiding to surface level in the absence of any lifting agent after the front passes.

Ice fog forms in very low temperatures and can be the result of other mechanisms mentioned here, as well as the exhalation of moist warm air by herds of animals. It can be associated with the diamond dust form of precipitation, in which very small crystals of ice form and slowly fall. This often occurs during blue sky conditions, which can cause many types of halos and other results of refraction of sunlight by the airborne crystals.

Freezing fog, which deposits rime, is composed of droplets of supercooled water that freeze to surfaces on contact.[23]

Precipitation fog (or frontal fog) forms as precipitation falls into drier air below the cloud, the liquid droplets evaporate into water vapor. The water vapor cools and at the dewpoint it condenses and fog forms.

Hail fog sometimes occurs in the vicinity of significant hail accumulations due to decreased temperature and increased moisture leading to saturation in a very shallow layer near the surface. It most often occurs when there is a warm, humid layer atop the hail and when wind is light. This ground fog tends to be localized but can be extremely dense and abrupt. It may form shortly after the hail falls; when the hail has had time to cool the air and as it absorbs heat when melting and evaporating.[24]

Upslope fog forms when moist air is going up the slope of a mountain or hill (orographic lifting) which condenses into fog on account of adiabatic cooling, and to a lesser extent the drop in pressure with altitude.

Freezing conditions

Freezing fog occurs when liquid fog droplets freeze to surfaces, forming white soft or hard rime.[25] This is very common on mountain tops which are exposed to low clouds. It is equivalent to freezing rain, and essentially the same as the ice that forms inside a freezer which is not of the "frostless" or "frost-free" type. The term "freezing fog" may also refer to fog where water vapor is super-cooled, filling the air with small ice crystals similar to very light snow. It seems to make the fog "tangible", as if one could "grab a handful".

Aerial video of freezing fog in the Okanagan Highlands

In the western United States, freezing fog may be referred to as pogonip.[26] It occurs commonly during cold winter spells, usually in deep mountain valleys. The word pogonip is derived from the Shoshone word paγi̵nappi̵h, which means "cloud".[26][27] In The Old Farmer's Almanac, in the calendar for December, the phrase "Beware the Pogonip" regularly appears. In his anthology Smoke Bellew, Jack London described a pogonip which surrounded the main characters, killing one of them.

The phenomenon is also extremely common in the inland areas of the Pacific Northwest, with temperatures in the 10 to 30 °F (−12 to −1 °C) range. The Columbia Plateau experiences this phenomenon most years due to temperature inversions, sometimes lasting for as long as three weeks. The fog typically begins forming around the area of the Columbia River and expands, sometimes covering the land to distances as far away as LaPine, Oregon, almost 150 miles (240 km) due south of the river and into south central Washington.

Frozen fog (also known as ice fog) is any kind of fog where the droplets have frozen into extremely tiny crystals of ice in midair. Generally, this requires temperatures at or below −35 °C (−31 °F), making it common only in and near the Arctic and Antarctic regions.[28] It is most often seen in urban areas where it is created by the freezing of water vapor present in automobile exhaust and combustion products from heating and power generation. Urban ice fog can become extremely dense and will persist day and night until the temperature rises. Extremely small amounts of ice fog falling from the sky form a type of precipitation called ice crystals, often reported in Utqiaġvik, Alaska. Ice fog often leads to the visual phenomenon of light pillars.

Topographical influences

 
 
Fog over the Pedra do Sino (Bell Rock; left) and Dedo de Deus (God's Finger; right) peaks in the Serra dos Órgãos National Park, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil

Up-slope fog or hill fog forms when winds blow air up a slope (called orographic lift), adiabatically cooling it as it rises, and causing the moisture in it to condense. This often causes freezing fog on mountaintops, where the cloud ceiling would not otherwise be low enough.

Valley fog forms in mountain valleys, often during winter. It is essentially a radiation fog confined by local topography, and can last for several days in calm conditions. In California's Central Valley, valley fog is often referred to as tule fog.

Sea and coastal fog

Sea fog (also known as haar or fret) is heavily influenced by the presence of sea spray and microscopic airborne salt crystals. Clouds of all types require minute hygroscopic particles upon which water vapor can condense. Over the ocean surface, the most common particles are salt from salt spray produced by breaking waves. Except in areas of storminess, the most common areas of breaking waves are located near coastlines, hence the greatest densities of airborne salt particles are there.

Condensation on salt particles has been observed to occur at humidities as low as 70%, thus fog can occur even in relatively dry air in suitable locations such as the California coast. Typically, such lower humidity fog is preceded by a transparent mistiness along the coastline as condensation competes with evaporation, a phenomenon that is typically noticeable by beachgoers in the afternoon. Another recently discovered source of condensation nuclei for coastal fog is kelp seaweed. Researchers have found that under stress (intense sunlight, strong evaporation, etc.), kelp releases particles of iodine which in turn become nuclei for condensation of water vapor, causing fog that diffuses direct sunlight.[29]

Sea smoke, also called steam fog or evaporation fog, is the most localized form and is created by cold air passing over warmer water or moist land.[25] It often causes freezing fog, or sometimes hoar frost.

Arctic sea smoke is similar to sea smoke, but occurs when the air is very cold. Instead of condensing into water droplets, columns of freezing, rising, and condensing water vapor is formed. The water vapor produces the sea smoke fog, and is usually misty and smoke-like.[30]

Garúa fog near the coast of Chile and Peru,[31] occurs when typical fog produced by the sea travels inland, but suddenly meets an area of hot air. This causes the water particles of fog to shrink by evaporation, producing a "transparent mist". Garua fog is nearly invisible, yet it still forces drivers to use windshield wipers because of deposition of liquid water on hard surfaces. Camanchaca is a similar, dense fog.

Visibility effects

 
Light fog reduces visibility on a suburban street, rendering the cyclist very hazy at about 200 m (220 yd). The limit of visibility is about 400 m (440 yd), which is before the end of the street.

Depending on the concentration of the droplets, visibility in fog can range from the appearance of haze, to almost zero visibility. Many lives are lost each year worldwide from accidents involving fog conditions on the highways, including multiple-vehicle collisions.

The aviation travel industry is affected by the severity of fog conditions. Even though modern auto-landing computers can put an aircraft down without the aid of a pilot, personnel manning an airport control tower must be able to see if aircraft are sitting on the runway awaiting takeoff. Safe operations are difficult in thick fog, and civilian airports may forbid takeoffs and landings until conditions improve.

A solution for landing returning military aircraft developed in World War II was called Fog Investigation and Dispersal Operation (FIDO). It involved burning enormous amounts of fuel alongside runways to evaporate fog, allowing returning fighter and bomber pilots sufficient visual cues to safely land their aircraft. The high energy demands of this method discourage its use for routine operations.

Shadows

 
Sutro Tower casts a 3-dimensional fog shadow

Shadows are cast through fog in three dimensions. The fog is dense enough to be illuminated by light that passes through gaps in a structure or tree, but thin enough to let a large quantity of that light pass through to illuminate points further on. As a result, object shadows appear as "beams" oriented in a direction parallel to the light source. These voluminous shadows are created the same way as crepuscular rays, which are the shadows of clouds. In fog, it is solid objects that cast shadows.

Sound propagation and acoustic effects

Sound typically travels fastest and farthest through solids, then liquids, then gases such as the atmosphere. Sound is affected during fog conditions due to the small distances between water droplets, and air temperature differences.

Molecular effect: Though fog is essentially liquid water, the many droplets are separated by small air gaps. High-pitched sounds have a high frequency, which in turn means they have a short wavelength. To transmit a high frequency wave, air must move back and forth very quickly. Short-wavelength high-pitched sound waves are reflected and refracted by many separated water droplets, partially cancelling and dissipating their energy (a process called "damping"). In contrast, low pitched notes, with a low frequency and a long wavelength, move the air less rapidly and less often, and lose less energy to interactions with small water droplets. Low-pitched notes are less affected by fog and travel further, which is why foghorns use a low-pitched tone.[32]

Temperature effect: A fog can be caused by a temperature inversion where cold air is pooled at the surface which helped to create the fog, while warmer air sits above it. The inverted boundary between cold air and warm air reflects sound waves back toward the ground, allowing sound that would normally radiate out escaping into the upper atmosphere to instead bounce back and travel near the surface. A temperature inversion increases the distance that lower frequency sounds can travel, by reflecting the sound between the ground and the inversion layer.[33]

Record extremes

Particularly foggy places include[citation needed] Hamilton, New Zealand and Grand Banks off the coast of Newfoundland (the meeting place of the cold Labrador Current from the north and the much warmer Gulf Stream from the south). Some very foggy land areas in the world include Argentia (Newfoundland) and Point Reyes (California), each with over 200 foggy days per year.[citation needed] Even in generally warmer southern Europe, thick fog and localized fog are often found in lowlands and valleys, such as the lower part of the Po Valley and the Arno and Tiber valleys in Italy; Ebro Valley in northeastern Spain; as well as on the Swiss plateau, especially in the Seeland area, in late autumn and winter.[citation needed] Other notably foggy areas include coastal Chile (in the south); coastal Namibia; Nord, Greenland; and the Severnaya Zemlya islands.[citation needed]

As a water source

Redwood forests in California receive approximately 30–40% of their moisture from coastal fog by way of fog drip. Change in climate patterns could result in relative drought in these areas.[34] Some animals, including insects, depend on wet fog as a principal source of water, particularly in otherwise desert climes, as along many African coastal areas. Some coastal communities use fog nets to extract moisture from the atmosphere where groundwater pumping and rainwater collection are insufficient. Fog can be of different type according to climatic conditions.

Artificial fog

 
An artificial opacifying fog triggered remotely to scare off burglars.

Artificial fog is man-made fog that is usually created by vaporizing a water- and glycol- or glycerine-based fluid. The fluid is injected into a heated metal block, and evaporates quickly. The resulting pressure forces the vapor out of a vent. Upon coming into contact with cool outside air, the vapor condenses in microscopic droplets and appears as fog.[35] Such fog machines are primarily used for entertainment applications.

Historical references

The presence of fog has often played a key role in historical events, such as strategic battles. One example is the Battle of Long Island (27 August 1776), when American general George Washington and his command were able to evade imminent capture by the British Army, using fog to conceal their escape. Another example is D-Day (6 June 1944) during World War II, when the Allies landed on the beaches of Normandy, France during fog conditions. Both positive and negative results were reported from both sides during that battle, due to impaired visibility.[36]

Gallery

See also

Technology

Weather

Other

References

  1. ^ Gultepe, Ismail, ed. (2 January 2008). . Fog and Boundary Layer Clouds. p. 1126. ISBN 978-3-7643-8418-0. Archived from the original on 3 September 2016. The international definition of fog consists of a suspended collection of water droplets or ice crystal near the Earth's surface... Reprint from Pure and Applied Geophysics. 164 (6–7). 2007.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  2. ^ "What's the Difference Between Fog and Clouds?". NOAA. 2022.
  3. ^ Use of the term "fog" to mean any cloud that is at or near the Earth's surface can result in ambiguity as when, for example, a stratocumulus cloud covers a mountaintop. An observer on the mountain may say that he or she is in a fog, however, to outside observers a cloud is covering the mountain. (Thomas, P. (2005). . p. 3. ISBN 0-7844-0795-9. Archived from the original on 3 September 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.) In fact, some people commonly mistake mist for fog. These two are a little bit different as mist is thinner than fog. () Further distinguishing the terms, fog rarely results in rain, while clouds are the common source of rain.
  4. ^ (PDF). Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology. 1 September 2005. pp. 8–1, 8–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 May 2011. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  5. ^ Annex 3 (17th ed.), July 2010
  6. ^ "Fog – AMS Glossary". from the original on 27 March 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Fog" (PDF). National Weather Service. 2022.
  8. ^ Robert Penrose Pearce (2002). Meteorology at the Millennium. Academic Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-12-548035-2. Retrieved 2 January 2009.
  9. ^ "Virga and Dry Thunderstorms". National Weather Service Office, Spokane, Washington. from the original on 22 May 2009.
  10. ^ Bart van den Hurk; Eleanor Blyth (2008). (PDF). KNMI. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 2 January 2009.
  11. ^ Krishna Ramanujan; Brad Bohlander (2002). . National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Space Flight Center. Archived from the original on 3 June 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2009.
  12. ^ National Weather Service JetStream (2008). . Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2009.
  13. ^ Michael Pidwirny (2008). "CHAPTER 8: Introduction to the Hydrosphere (e). Cloud Formation Processes". Physical Geography. from the original on 20 December 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  14. ^ "Front". Glossary of Meteorology. American Meteorological Society. 25 April 2012. from the original on 10 October 2018.
  15. ^ Roth, David M. (14 December 2006). "Unified Surface Analysis Manual" (PDF). Hydrometeorological Prediction Center. (PDF) from the original on 29 September 2006. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  16. ^ FMI (2007). "Fog And Stratus – Meteorological Physical Background". Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik. from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  17. ^ a b Gleissman, Stephe (2007). Agroecology: the ecology of sustainable food systems. CRC Press. p. 73. ISBN 0849328454.
  18. ^ Allred, Lance (2009). Enchanted Rock: A Natural and Human History. University of Texas Press. p. 99. ISBN 0292719639.
  19. ^ Cox, Robert E. Applying Fog Forecasting Techniques using AWIPS and the Internet 29 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine. National Weather Service, 2007. nwas.org
  20. ^ Climate education update: News and information about climate change for teachers and students 27 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Atmospheric Radiation Measurement. Climate Research Facility. U.S. Department of Energy. education.arm.gov
  21. ^ Frost, Helen (2004). Fog. Capstone Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-7368-2093-6.
  22. ^ "Fog Facts". Fast Facts for Kids. 2022.
  23. ^ "NWS Glossary". National Weather Service. 2022.
  24. ^ Marshall, T., Hoadley, D. (1995). Storm Talk. Tim Marshall.[full citation needed]
  25. ^ a b Understanding Weather – Fog 31 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine. BBC Weather. bbc.co.uk
  26. ^ a b "pogonip". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  27. ^ "Pogonip – Definition from the Dictionary.com". from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  28. ^ Haby, Jeff. What is the difference between ice fog and freezing fog? 8 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine theweatherprediction.com
  29. ^ Stressed seaweed contributes to cloudy coastal skies, study suggests 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine, eurekalert.org
  30. ^ "Arctic Sea Smoke". encyclopedia.com. from the original on 6 May 2016.
  31. ^ Cowling, R. M., Richardson, D. M., Pierce, S. M. (2004). Vegetation of Southern Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 192. ISBN 0521548012.
  32. ^ "Does fog have a dampening effect on sounds?". thenakedscientists.com. 14 June 2009. from the original on 16 January 2015.
  33. ^ "How fog can play tricks on your ears?". katu.com. from the original on 12 April 2015.
  34. ^ Joyce, Christopher (23 February 2010). "Fog Fluctuations Could Threaten Giant Redwoods". NPR. from the original on 27 January 2016.
  35. ^ Karukstis, K. K., Van Hecke, G. R. (2003). Chemistry connections: the basis of everyday phonemena. Academic Press. p. 23. ISBN 0124001513.
  36. ^ Tardif, Robert M. (2007). Characterizing fog and the physical mechanisms leading to its formation during precipitation in a coastal area of the northeastern United States. Bibcode:2007PhDT........70T.
  37. ^ "Sunset Panorama at La Silla". eso.org. from the original on 28 November 2015.

Under "[ ^ "Federal Meteorological Handbook Number 1: Chapter 8 – Present Weather" (PDF). Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology. 1 September 2005. pp. 8–1, 8–2. Retrieved 9 October 2010. ] " ….

Actually use the following link- http://www.ofcm.gov/publications/fmh/FMH1/FMH1.pdf and proceed to Chapter 8, etc.

Further reading

  • Ahrens, C. (1991). Meteorology today: an introduction to weather, climate, and the environment. West Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-314-80905-6.
  • Corton, Christine L. London Fog: The Biography (2015)
  • Riddle, Laurence G.; Cayan, Daniel R.; Filonczuk, Maria K. (1 July 1995). "Variability of Marine Fog Along the California Coast". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Lu, Chunsong; Liu, Yangang; Niu, Shengjie; Zhao, Lijuan; Yu, Huaying; Cheng, Muning (30 January 2014). "Examination of microphysical relationships and corresponding microphysical processes in warm fogs". Acta Meteorologica Sinica. 27 (6): 832–848. doi:10.1007/s13351-013-0610-0. S2CID 2471958.
  • Lu, Chunsong; Niu, Shengjie; Tang, Lili; Lv, Jingjing; Zhao, Lijuan; Zhu, Bin (July 2010). "Chemical composition of fog water in Nanjing area of China and its related fog microphysics". Atmospheric Research. 97 (1–2): 47–69. Bibcode:2010AtmRe..97...47L. doi:10.1016/j.atmosres.2010.03.007.

External links

  • Social & Economic Costs of Fog from "NOAA Socioeconomics" website initiative
  • United States' current dense fog advisories from NOAA
  • Current Western US fog satellite pictures from NOAA

other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, visible, aerosol, consisting, tiny, water, droplets, crystals, suspended, near, earth, surface, considered, type, lying, cloud, usually, resembling, stratus, heavily, influenced, nearby, bodies, water, topography, w. For other uses see Fog disambiguation and Foggy disambiguation Fog is a visible aerosol consisting of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air at or near the Earth s surface 1 2 Fog can be considered a type of low lying cloud usually resembling stratus and is heavily influenced by nearby bodies of water topography and wind conditions In turn fog affects many human activities such as shipping travel and warfare View from Blassenstein mountain near Scheibbs Lower Austria to the west with fog over Erlauf valley and Danube A massive fog bank over Twentynine Palms California covers the entire city as it begins to rise and join the clouds above it source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Fog dissipating over Koblenz Germany Fog appears when water vapor water in its gaseous form condenses During condensation molecules of water vapor combine to make tiny liquid water droplets that hang in the air Sea fog which shows up near bodies of saline water is formed as water vapor condenses on bits of salt Fog is similar to but less transparent than mist Contents 1 Definition 2 Formation 3 Types 4 Freezing conditions 5 Topographical influences 6 Sea and coastal fog 7 Visibility effects 8 Shadows 9 Sound propagation and acoustic effects 10 Record extremes 11 As a water source 12 Artificial fog 13 Historical references 14 Gallery 15 See also 15 1 Technology 15 2 Weather 15 3 Other 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksDefinition Edit A foggy Aura River in Turku Finland The term fog is typically distinguished from the more generic term cloud in that fog is low lying and the moisture in the fog is often generated locally such as from a nearby body of water like a lake or the ocean or from nearby moist ground or marshes 3 By definition fog reduces visibility to less than 1 km 0 62 mi whereas mist causes lesser impairment of visibility 4 For aviation purposes in the United Kingdom a visibility of less than 5 km 3 1 mi but greater than 999 m 3 278 ft is considered to be mist if the relative humidity is 95 or greater below 95 haze is reported 5 full citation needed Formation EditSee also Cloud physics Minute droplets of water constitute this after dark radiation fog with an ambient temperature of 2 C 28 F Their motion trails are captured as streaks A close up view of water droplets forming fog Those outside the camera lens s depth of field appear as orbs Fog forms when the difference between air temperature and dew point is less than 2 5 C 4 5 F 6 7 Fog begins to form when water vapor condenses into tiny water droplets that are suspended in the air Some examples of ways that water vapor is added to the air are by wind convergence into areas of upward motion 8 precipitation or virga falling from above 9 daytime heating evaporating water from the surface of oceans water bodies or wet land 10 transpiration from plants 11 cool or dry air moving over warmer water 12 and lifting air over mountains 13 Water vapor normally begins to condense on condensation nuclei such as dust ice and salt in order to form clouds 14 15 Fog like its elevated cousin stratus is a stable cloud deck which tends to form when a cool stable air mass is trapped underneath a warm air mass 16 Fog normally occurs at a relative humidity near 100 17 This occurs from either added moisture in the air or falling ambient air temperature 17 However fog can form at lower humidities and can sometimes fail to form with relative humidity at 100 At 100 relative humidity the air cannot hold additional moisture thus the air will become supersaturated if additional moisture is added Fog commonly produces precipitation in the form of drizzle or very light snow Drizzle occurs when the humidity of fog attains 100 and the minute cloud droplets begin to coalesce into larger droplets 18 This can occur when the fog layer is lifted and cooled sufficiently or when it is forcibly compressed from above by descending air Drizzle becomes freezing drizzle when the temperature at the surface drops below the freezing point The thickness of a fog layer is largely determined by the altitude of the inversion boundary which in coastal or oceanic locales is also the top of the marine layer above which the air mass is warmer and drier The inversion boundary varies its altitude primarily in response to the weight of the air above it which is measured in terms of atmospheric pressure The marine layer and any fog bank it may contain will be squashed when the pressure is high and conversely may expand upwards when the pressure above it is lowering Types EditFog can form in a number of ways depending on how the cooling that caused the condensation occurred Radiation fog is formed by the cooling of land after sunset by infrared thermal radiation in calm conditions with a clear sky The cooling ground then cools adjacent air by conduction causing the air temperature to fall and reach the dew point forming fog In perfect calm the fog layer can be less than a meter thick but turbulence can promote a thicker layer Radiation fog occurs at night and usually does not last long after sunrise but it can persist all day in the winter months especially in areas bounded by high ground Radiation fog is most common in autumn and early winter Examples of this phenomenon include tule fog 19 Ground fog is fog that obscures less than 60 of the sky and does not extend to the base of any overhead clouds 20 However the term is usually a synonym for shallow radiation fog in some cases the depth of the fog is on the order of tens of centimetres over certain kinds of terrain with the absence of wind Advection fog layer in San Francisco with the Golden Gate Bridge and skyline in the background Advection fog occurs when moist air passes over a cool surface by advection wind and is cooled 21 It is common as a warm front passes over an area with significant snow pack It is most common at sea when moist air encounters cooler waters including areas of cold water upwelling such as along the California coast see San Francisco fog A strong enough temperature difference over water or bare ground can also cause advection fog Although strong winds often mix the air and can disperse fragment or prevent many kinds of fog markedly warmer and humid air blowing over a snowpack can continue to generate advection fog at elevated velocities up to 80 km h 50 mph or more this fog will be in a turbulent rapidly moving and comparatively shallow layer observed as a few centimetres inches in depth over flat farm fields flat urban terrain and the like and or form more complex forms where the terrain is different such as rotating areas in the lee of hills or large buildings and so on Fog formed by advection along the California coastline is propelled onto land by one of several processes A cold front can push the marine layer coast ward an occurrence most typical in the spring or late fall During the summer months a low pressure trough produced by intense heating inland creates a strong pressure gradient drawing in the dense marine layer Also during the summer strong high pressure aloft over the desert southwest usually in connection with the summer monsoon produces a south to southeasterly flow which can drive the offshore marine layer up the coastline a phenomenon known as a southerly surge typically following a coastal heat spell However if the monsoonal flow is sufficiently turbulent it might instead break up the marine layer and any fog it may contain Moderate turbulence will typically transform a fog bank lifting it and breaking it up into shallow convective clouds called stratocumulus Evaporation fog or steam fog forms over bodies of water overlain by much colder air this situation can also lead to the formation of steam devils which look like their dust counterparts 22 Lake effect fog is of this type sometimes in combination with other causes like radiation fog It tends to differ from most advective fog formed over land in that it is like lake effect snow a convective phenomenon resulting in fog that can be very dense and deep and looks fluffy from above Frontal fog forms in much the same way as stratus cloud near a front when raindrops falling from relatively warm air above a frontal surface evaporate into cooler air close to the Earth s surface and cause it to become saturated This type of fog can be the result of a very low frontal stratus cloud subsiding to surface level in the absence of any lifting agent after the front passes Ice fog forms in very low temperatures and can be the result of other mechanisms mentioned here as well as the exhalation of moist warm air by herds of animals It can be associated with the diamond dust form of precipitation in which very small crystals of ice form and slowly fall This often occurs during blue sky conditions which can cause many types of halos and other results of refraction of sunlight by the airborne crystals Freezing fog which deposits rime is composed of droplets of supercooled water that freeze to surfaces on contact 23 Precipitation fog or frontal fog forms as precipitation falls into drier air below the cloud the liquid droplets evaporate into water vapor The water vapor cools and at the dewpoint it condenses and fog forms Hail fog sometimes occurs in the vicinity of significant hail accumulations due to decreased temperature and increased moisture leading to saturation in a very shallow layer near the surface It most often occurs when there is a warm humid layer atop the hail and when wind is light This ground fog tends to be localized but can be extremely dense and abrupt It may form shortly after the hail falls when the hail has had time to cool the air and as it absorbs heat when melting and evaporating 24 Upslope fog forms when moist air is going up the slope of a mountain or hill orographic lifting which condenses into fog on account of adiabatic cooling and to a lesser extent the drop in pressure with altitude Freezing conditions EditFreezing fog occurs when liquid fog droplets freeze to surfaces forming white soft or hard rime 25 This is very common on mountain tops which are exposed to low clouds It is equivalent to freezing rain and essentially the same as the ice that forms inside a freezer which is not of the frostless or frost free type The term freezing fog may also refer to fog where water vapor is super cooled filling the air with small ice crystals similar to very light snow It seems to make the fog tangible as if one could grab a handful source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Aerial video of freezing fog in the Okanagan Highlands In the western United States freezing fog may be referred to as pogonip 26 It occurs commonly during cold winter spells usually in deep mountain valleys The word pogonip is derived from the Shoshone word pagi nappi h which means cloud 26 27 In The Old Farmer s Almanac in the calendar for December the phrase Beware the Pogonip regularly appears In his anthology Smoke Bellew Jack London described a pogonip which surrounded the main characters killing one of them The phenomenon is also extremely common in the inland areas of the Pacific Northwest with temperatures in the 10 to 30 F 12 to 1 C range The Columbia Plateau experiences this phenomenon most years due to temperature inversions sometimes lasting for as long as three weeks The fog typically begins forming around the area of the Columbia River and expands sometimes covering the land to distances as far away as LaPine Oregon almost 150 miles 240 km due south of the river and into south central Washington Frozen fog also known as ice fog is any kind of fog where the droplets have frozen into extremely tiny crystals of ice in midair Generally this requires temperatures at or below 35 C 31 F making it common only in and near the Arctic and Antarctic regions 28 It is most often seen in urban areas where it is created by the freezing of water vapor present in automobile exhaust and combustion products from heating and power generation Urban ice fog can become extremely dense and will persist day and night until the temperature rises Extremely small amounts of ice fog falling from the sky form a type of precipitation called ice crystals often reported in Utqiaġvik Alaska Ice fog often leads to the visual phenomenon of light pillars Morning freezing fog in Elko Nevada Pogonip fog in Virginia City Nevada from an early 20th century postcard A tree in a field during extreme cold with frozen fog Ice fog on Pyhajarvi Tampere during sunset Topographical influences Edit Fog over the Pedra do Sino Bell Rock left and Dedo de Deus God s Finger right peaks in the Serra dos orgaos National Park Rio de Janeiro state Brazil Up slope fog or hill fog forms when winds blow air up a slope called orographic lift adiabatically cooling it as it rises and causing the moisture in it to condense This often causes freezing fog on mountaintops where the cloud ceiling would not otherwise be low enough Valley fog forms in mountain valleys often during winter It is essentially a radiation fog confined by local topography and can last for several days in calm conditions In California s Central Valley valley fog is often referred to as tule fog Sea and coastal fog EditSea fog also known as haar or fret is heavily influenced by the presence of sea spray and microscopic airborne salt crystals Clouds of all types require minute hygroscopic particles upon which water vapor can condense Over the ocean surface the most common particles are salt from salt spray produced by breaking waves Except in areas of storminess the most common areas of breaking waves are located near coastlines hence the greatest densities of airborne salt particles are there Condensation on salt particles has been observed to occur at humidities as low as 70 thus fog can occur even in relatively dry air in suitable locations such as the California coast Typically such lower humidity fog is preceded by a transparent mistiness along the coastline as condensation competes with evaporation a phenomenon that is typically noticeable by beachgoers in the afternoon Another recently discovered source of condensation nuclei for coastal fog is kelp seaweed Researchers have found that under stress intense sunlight strong evaporation etc kelp releases particles of iodine which in turn become nuclei for condensation of water vapor causing fog that diffuses direct sunlight 29 Sea smoke also called steam fog or evaporation fog is the most localized form and is created by cold air passing over warmer water or moist land 25 It often causes freezing fog or sometimes hoar frost Arctic sea smoke is similar to sea smoke but occurs when the air is very cold Instead of condensing into water droplets columns of freezing rising and condensing water vapor is formed The water vapor produces the sea smoke fog and is usually misty and smoke like 30 Garua fog near the coast of Chile and Peru 31 occurs when typical fog produced by the sea travels inland but suddenly meets an area of hot air This causes the water particles of fog to shrink by evaporation producing a transparent mist Garua fog is nearly invisible yet it still forces drivers to use windshield wipers because of deposition of liquid water on hard surfaces Camanchaca is a similar dense fog Fog rolls into Seattle from the sea Sea fog or fret encroaching on Brighton Pier Sea fog in the Arctic Ocean near the island of Jan MayenVisibility effects Edit Serbia Light fog reduces visibility on a suburban street rendering the cyclist very hazy at about 200 m 220 yd The limit of visibility is about 400 m 440 yd which is before the end of the street Depending on the concentration of the droplets visibility in fog can range from the appearance of haze to almost zero visibility Many lives are lost each year worldwide from accidents involving fog conditions on the highways including multiple vehicle collisions The aviation travel industry is affected by the severity of fog conditions Even though modern auto landing computers can put an aircraft down without the aid of a pilot personnel manning an airport control tower must be able to see if aircraft are sitting on the runway awaiting takeoff Safe operations are difficult in thick fog and civilian airports may forbid takeoffs and landings until conditions improve A solution for landing returning military aircraft developed in World War II was called Fog Investigation and Dispersal Operation FIDO It involved burning enormous amounts of fuel alongside runways to evaporate fog allowing returning fighter and bomber pilots sufficient visual cues to safely land their aircraft The high energy demands of this method discourage its use for routine operations Shadows Edit Sutro Tower casts a 3 dimensional fog shadow Shadows are cast through fog in three dimensions The fog is dense enough to be illuminated by light that passes through gaps in a structure or tree but thin enough to let a large quantity of that light pass through to illuminate points further on As a result object shadows appear as beams oriented in a direction parallel to the light source These voluminous shadows are created the same way as crepuscular rays which are the shadows of clouds In fog it is solid objects that cast shadows Sound propagation and acoustic effects EditSee also Acoustic location Acoustic shadow and Foghorn Sound typically travels fastest and farthest through solids then liquids then gases such as the atmosphere Sound is affected during fog conditions due to the small distances between water droplets and air temperature differences Molecular effect Though fog is essentially liquid water the many droplets are separated by small air gaps High pitched sounds have a high frequency which in turn means they have a short wavelength To transmit a high frequency wave air must move back and forth very quickly Short wavelength high pitched sound waves are reflected and refracted by many separated water droplets partially cancelling and dissipating their energy a process called damping In contrast low pitched notes with a low frequency and a long wavelength move the air less rapidly and less often and lose less energy to interactions with small water droplets Low pitched notes are less affected by fog and travel further which is why foghorns use a low pitched tone 32 Temperature effect A fog can be caused by a temperature inversion where cold air is pooled at the surface which helped to create the fog while warmer air sits above it The inverted boundary between cold air and warm air reflects sound waves back toward the ground allowing sound that would normally radiate out escaping into the upper atmosphere to instead bounce back and travel near the surface A temperature inversion increases the distance that lower frequency sounds can travel by reflecting the sound between the ground and the inversion layer 33 Record extremes EditParticularly foggy places include citation needed Hamilton New Zealand and Grand Banks off the coast of Newfoundland the meeting place of the cold Labrador Current from the north and the much warmer Gulf Stream from the south Some very foggy land areas in the world include Argentia Newfoundland and Point Reyes California each with over 200 foggy days per year citation needed Even in generally warmer southern Europe thick fog and localized fog are often found in lowlands and valleys such as the lower part of the Po Valley and the Arno and Tiber valleys in Italy Ebro Valley in northeastern Spain as well as on the Swiss plateau especially in the Seeland area in late autumn and winter citation needed Other notably foggy areas include coastal Chile in the south coastal Namibia Nord Greenland and the Severnaya Zemlya islands citation needed As a water source EditRedwood forests in California receive approximately 30 40 of their moisture from coastal fog by way of fog drip Change in climate patterns could result in relative drought in these areas 34 Some animals including insects depend on wet fog as a principal source of water particularly in otherwise desert climes as along many African coastal areas Some coastal communities use fog nets to extract moisture from the atmosphere where groundwater pumping and rainwater collection are insufficient Fog can be of different type according to climatic conditions Artificial fog Edit An artificial opacifying fog triggered remotely to scare off burglars Artificial fog is man made fog that is usually created by vaporizing a water and glycol or glycerine based fluid The fluid is injected into a heated metal block and evaporates quickly The resulting pressure forces the vapor out of a vent Upon coming into contact with cool outside air the vapor condenses in microscopic droplets and appears as fog 35 Such fog machines are primarily used for entertainment applications Historical references EditSee also Pea soup fog Fog of war and Theatrical smoke and fog The presence of fog has often played a key role in historical events such as strategic battles One example is the Battle of Long Island 27 August 1776 when American general George Washington and his command were able to evade imminent capture by the British Army using fog to conceal their escape Another example is D Day 6 June 1944 during World War II when the Allies landed on the beaches of Normandy France during fog conditions Both positive and negative results were reported from both sides during that battle due to impaired visibility 36 Gallery Edit Maple tree with red leaves in the morning mist in western Estonia A fog on the field of the Leppalahti ja Kuivaniemi villages in Kuopio Finland Fog hovering over the valleys surrounding La Silla Observatory 37 Fog surrounding skyscrapers in the Melbourne city centre Light fog over Taipei Taiwan with Taipei 101 in the background Fog in London with the Palace of Westminster in the background Dense fog over Indian subcontinent captured by NASA s Aqua satellite in December 2012 Fog partially obscuring a mountain in Tirupati in the India summer Fog in the form of a cloud descends upon a High Desert community in the western US while leaving the mountain exposed See also EditTechnology Edit Anti fog Automotive lighting Decontamination foam Fog Investigation and Dispersal Operation FIDO Fog collection Foghorn Fog machine Fogging photography Fog lamp Head up display Runway visual range TransmissometerWeather Edit Cloud Fog season Haboob sandstorm Mist San Francisco fog Smoke Smog Whiteout weather Vog StratusOther Edit Multi vehicle collisionReferences Edit Gultepe Ismail ed 2 January 2008 Fog Visibility and Forecasting Fog and Boundary Layer Clouds p 1126 ISBN 978 3 7643 8418 0 Archived from the original on 3 September 2016 The international definition of fog consists of a suspended collection of water droplets or ice crystal near the Earth s surface Reprint from Pure and Applied Geophysics 164 6 7 2007 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint untitled periodical link What s the Difference Between Fog and Clouds NOAA 2022 Use of the term fog to mean any cloud that is at or near the Earth s surface can result in ambiguity as when for example a stratocumulus cloud covers a mountaintop An observer on the mountain may say that he or she is in a fog however to outside observers a cloud is covering the mountain Thomas P 2005 Standard practice for the design and operation of supercooled fog dispersal projects p 3 ISBN 0 7844 0795 9 Archived from the original on 3 September 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2016 In fact some people commonly mistake mist for fog These two are a little bit different as mist is thinner than fog Further distinguishing the terms fog rarely results in rain while clouds are the common source of rain Federal Meteorological Handbook Number 1 Chapter 8 Present Weather PDF Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology 1 September 2005 pp 8 1 8 2 Archived from the original PDF on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 9 October 2010 Annex 3 17th ed July 2010 Fog AMS Glossary Archived from the original on 27 March 2013 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Fog PDF National Weather Service 2022 Robert Penrose Pearce 2002 Meteorology at the Millennium Academic Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 12 548035 2 Retrieved 2 January 2009 Virga and Dry Thunderstorms National Weather Service Office Spokane Washington Archived from the original on 22 May 2009 Bart van den Hurk Eleanor Blyth 2008 Global maps of Local Land Atmosphere coupling PDF KNMI Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 2 January 2009 Krishna Ramanujan Brad Bohlander 2002 Landcover changes may rival greenhouse gases as cause of climate change National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on 3 June 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2009 National Weather Service JetStream 2008 Air Masses Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2009 Michael Pidwirny 2008 CHAPTER 8 Introduction to the Hydrosphere e Cloud Formation Processes Physical Geography Archived from the original on 20 December 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2009 Front Glossary of Meteorology American Meteorological Society 25 April 2012 Archived from the original on 10 October 2018 Roth David M 14 December 2006 Unified Surface Analysis Manual PDF Hydrometeorological Prediction Center Archived PDF from the original on 29 September 2006 Retrieved 9 October 2010 FMI 2007 Fog And Stratus Meteorological Physical Background Zentralanstalt fur Meteorologie und Geodynamik Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 7 February 2009 a b Gleissman Stephe 2007 Agroecology the ecology of sustainable food systems CRC Press p 73 ISBN 0849328454 Allred Lance 2009 Enchanted Rock A Natural and Human History University of Texas Press p 99 ISBN 0292719639 Cox Robert E Applying Fog Forecasting Techniques using AWIPS and the Internet Archived 29 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine National Weather Service 2007 nwas org Climate education update News and information about climate change for teachers and students Archived 27 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Climate Research Facility U S Department of Energy education arm gov Frost Helen 2004 Fog Capstone Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 7368 2093 6 Fog Facts Fast Facts for Kids 2022 NWS Glossary National Weather Service 2022 Marshall T Hoadley D 1995 Storm Talk Tim Marshall full citation needed a b Understanding Weather Fog Archived 31 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine BBC Weather bbc co uk a b pogonip Merriam Webster Dictionary Pogonip Definition from the Dictionary com Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2013 Haby Jeff What is the difference between ice fog and freezing fog Archived 8 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine theweatherprediction com Stressed seaweed contributes to cloudy coastal skies study suggests Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine eurekalert org Arctic Sea Smoke encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 6 May 2016 Cowling R M Richardson D M Pierce S M 2004 Vegetation of Southern Africa Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 0521548012 Does fog have a dampening effect on sounds thenakedscientists com 14 June 2009 Archived from the original on 16 January 2015 How fog can play tricks on your ears katu com Archived from the original on 12 April 2015 Joyce Christopher 23 February 2010 Fog Fluctuations Could Threaten Giant Redwoods NPR Archived from the original on 27 January 2016 Karukstis K K Van Hecke G R 2003 Chemistry connections the basis of everyday phonemena Academic Press p 23 ISBN 0124001513 Tardif Robert M 2007 Characterizing fog and the physical mechanisms leading to its formation during precipitation in a coastal area of the northeastern United States Bibcode 2007PhDT 70T Sunset Panorama at La Silla eso org Archived from the original on 28 November 2015 Under Federal Meteorological Handbook Number 1 Chapter 8 Present Weather PDF Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology 1 September 2005 pp 8 1 8 2 Retrieved 9 October 2010 Actually use the following link http www ofcm gov publications fmh FMH1 FMH1 pdf and proceed to Chapter 8 etc Further reading EditAhrens C 1991 Meteorology today an introduction to weather climate and the environment West Pub Co ISBN 978 0 314 80905 6 Corton Christine L London Fog The Biography 2015 Riddle Laurence G Cayan Daniel R Filonczuk Maria K 1 July 1995 Variability of Marine Fog Along the California Coast a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lu Chunsong Liu Yangang Niu Shengjie Zhao Lijuan Yu Huaying Cheng Muning 30 January 2014 Examination of microphysical relationships and corresponding microphysical processes in warm fogs Acta Meteorologica Sinica 27 6 832 848 doi 10 1007 s13351 013 0610 0 S2CID 2471958 Lu Chunsong Niu Shengjie Tang Lili Lv Jingjing Zhao Lijuan Zhu Bin July 2010 Chemical composition of fog water in Nanjing area of China and its related fog microphysics Atmospheric Research 97 1 2 47 69 Bibcode 2010AtmRe 97 47L doi 10 1016 j atmosres 2010 03 007 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fog Social amp Economic Costs of Fog from NOAA Socioeconomics website initiative United States current dense fog advisories from NOAA Current Western US fog satellite pictures from NOAA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fog amp oldid 1152010767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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