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Wikipedia

Frost

Frost is a thin layer of ice on a solid surface, which forms from water vapor that deposits onto a freezing surface. Frost forms when the air contains more water vapor than it can normally hold at a specific temperature. The process is similar to the formation of dew, except it occurs below the freezing point of water typically without crossing through a liquid state.

A patch of grass showing three zones.
  1. crystalline frost in the below-freezing shade (blue, lower right)
  2. frost in the warming but still below freezing strip most recently exposed to sunlight (white, center)
  3. frost-free region: here, the previous frost has melted from a more prolonged exposure to sunlight (green, upper left.)

Air always contains a certain amount of water vapor, depending on temperature. Warmer air can hold more than colder air. When the atmosphere contains more water than it can hold at a specific temperature, its relative humidity rises above 100% becoming supersaturated, and the excess water vapor is forced to deposit onto any nearby surface, forming seed crystals. The temperature at which frost will form is called the dew point, and depends on the humidity of the air.[1] When the temperature of the air drops below its dew point, excess water vapor is forced out of solution, resulting in a phase change directly from water vapor (a gas) to ice (a solid). As more water molecules are added to the seeds, crystal growth occurs, forming ice crystals. Crystals may vary in size and shape, from an even layer of numerous microscopic-seeds to fewer but much larger crystals, ranging from long dendritic crystals (tree-like) growing across a surface, acicular crystals (needle-like) growing outward from the surface, snowflake-shaped crystals, or even large, knifelike blades of ice covering an object, which depends on many factors such as temperature, air pressure, air motion and turbulence, surface roughness and wettability, and the level of supersaturation. For example, water vapor adsorbs to glass very well, so automobile windows will often frost before the paint, and large hoar-frost crystals can grow very rapidly when the air is very cold, calm, and heavily saturated, such as during an ice fog.

Frost may occur when warm, moist air comes into contact with a cold surface, cooling it below its dew point, such as warm breath on a freezing window. In the atmosphere, it more often occurs when both the air and the surface are below freezing, when the air experiences a drop in temperature bringing it below its dew point, for example, when the temperature falls after the Sun sets. In temperate climates, it most commonly appears on surfaces near the ground as fragile white crystals; in cold climates, it occurs in a greater variety of forms.[2] The propagation of crystal formation occurs by the process of nucleation, in specific, water nucleation, which is the same phenomenon responsible for the formation of clouds, fog, snow, rain and other meteorological phenomena.

The ice crystals of frost form as the result of fractal process development. The depth of frost crystals varies depending on the amount of time they have been accumulating, and the concentration of the water vapor (humidity). Frost crystals may be invisible (black), clear (translucent), or, if a mass of frost crystals scatters light in all directions, the coating of frost appears white.

Types of frost include crystalline frost (hoar frost or radiation frost) from deposition of water vapor from air of low humidity, white frost in humid conditions, window frost on glass surfaces, advection frost from cold wind over cold surfaces, black frost without visible ice at low temperatures and very low humidity, and rime under supercooled wet conditions.[2]

Plants that have evolved in warmer climates suffer damage when the temperature falls low enough to freeze the water in the cells that make up the plant tissue. The tissue damage resulting from this process is known as "frost damage". Farmers in those regions where frost damage has been known to affect their crops often invest in substantial means to protect their crops from such damage.

Formation edit

 
Frost in the highest town in Venezuela, Apartaderos: Because of its location in an alpine tundra ecosystem called páramo, a daily freeze-and-thaw cycle, sometimes described as "summer every day and winter every night", exists.

If a solid surface is chilled below the dew point of the surrounding humid air, and the surface itself is colder than freezing, ice will form on it. If the water deposits as a liquid that then freezes, it forms a coating that may look glassy, opaque, or crystalline, depending on its type. Depending on context, that process may also be called atmospheric icing. The ice it produces differs in some ways from crystalline frost, which consists of spicules of ice that typically project from the solid surface on which they grow.

The main difference between the ice coatings and frost spicules arises because the crystalline spicules grow directly from desublimation of water vapour from air, and desublimation is not a factor in icing of freezing surfaces. For desublimation to proceed, the surface must be below the frost point of the air, meaning that it is sufficiently cold for ice to form without passing through the liquid phase. The air must be humid, but not sufficiently humid to permit the condensation of liquid water, or icing will result instead of desublimation. The size of the crystals depends largely on the temperature, the amount of water vapor available, and how long they have been growing undisturbed.

As a rule, except in conditions where supercooled droplets are present in the air, frost will form only if the deposition surface is colder than the surrounding air. For instance, frost may be observed around cracks in cold wooden sidewalks when humid air escapes from the warmer ground beneath. Other objects on which frost commonly forms are those with low specific heat or high thermal emissivity, such as blackened metals, hence the accumulation of frost on the heads of rusty nails.

The apparently erratic occurrence of frost in adjacent localities is due partly to differences of elevation, the lower areas becoming colder on calm nights. Where static air settles above an area of ground in the absence of wind, the absorptivity and specific heat of the ground strongly influence the temperature that the trapped air attains.

Types edit

Hoar frost edit

 
A spider web covered in air hoar frost
 
Hoar frost on the snow
 
Depth hoar, imaged with optical (left) and scanning electron (right) microscopy

Hoar frost, also hoarfrost, radiation frost, or pruina, refers to white ice crystals deposited on the ground or loosely attached to exposed objects, such as wires or leaves.[3] They form on cold, clear nights when conditions are such that heat radiates into outer space faster than it can be replaced from nearby warm objects or brought in by the wind. Under suitable circumstances, objects cool to below the frost point[4] of the surrounding air, well below the freezing point of water. Such freezing may be promoted by effects such as flood frost or frost pocket.[5] These occur when ground-level radiation cools air until it flows downhill and accumulates in pockets of very cold air in valleys and hollows. Hoar frost may freeze in such low-lying cold air even when the air temperature a few feet above ground is well above freezing.

The word "hoar" comes from an Old English adjective that means "showing signs of old age". In this context, it refers to the frost that makes trees and bushes look like white hair.

Hoar frost may have different names depending on where it forms:

  • Air hoar is a deposit of hoar frost on objects above the surface, such as tree branches, plant stems, and wires.
  • Surface hoar refers to fern-like ice crystals directly deposited on snow, ice, or already frozen surfaces.
  • Crevasse hoar consists of crystals that form in glacial crevasses where water vapour can accumulate under calm weather conditions.
  • Depth hoar refers to faceted crystals that have slowly grown large within cavities beneath the surface of banks of dry snow. Depth hoar crystals grow continuously at the expense of neighbouring smaller crystals, so typically are visibly stepped and have faceted hollows.

When surface hoar covers sloping snowbanks, the layer of frost crystals may create an avalanche risk; when heavy layers of new snow cover the frosty surface, furry crystals standing out from the old snow hold off the falling flakes, forming a layer of voids that prevents the new snow layers from bonding strongly to the old snow beneath. Ideal conditions for hoarfrost to form on snow are cold, clear nights, with very light, cold air currents conveying humidity at the right rate for growth of frost crystals. Wind that is too strong or warm destroys the furry crystals, and thereby may permit a stronger bond between the old and new snow layers. However, if the winds are strong enough and cold enough to lay the crystals flat and dry, carpeting the snow with cold, loose crystals without removing or destroying them or letting them warm up and become sticky, then the frost interface between the snow layers may still present an avalanche danger, because the texture of the frost crystals differs from the snow texture, and the dry crystals will not stick to fresh snow. Such conditions still prevent a strong bond between the snow layers.[6]

In very low temperatures where fluffy surface hoar crystals form without subsequently being covered with snow, strong winds may break them off, forming a dust of ice particles and blowing them over the surface. The ice dust then may form yukimarimo, as has been observed in parts of Antarctica, in a process similar to the formation of dust bunnies and similar structures.

 
A flower with advection frost on the edges of its petals

Hoar frost and white frost also occur in man-made environments such as in freezers or industrial cold-storage facilities. If such cold spaces or the pipes serving them are not well insulated and are exposed to ambient humidity, the moisture will freeze instantly depending on the freezer temperature. The frost may coat pipes thickly, partly insulating them, but such inefficient insulation still is a source of heat loss.

Advection frost edit

Advection frost (also called wind frost) refers to tiny ice spikes that form when very cold wind is blowing over tree branches, poles, and other surfaces. It looks like rimming on the edges of flowers and leaves, and usually forms against the direction of the wind. It can occur at any hour, day or night.

Window frost edit

Window frost (also called fern frost or ice flowers) forms when a glass pane is exposed to very cold air on the outside and warmer, moderately moist air on the inside. If the pane is a bad insulator (for example, if it is a single-pane window), water vapour condenses on the glass, forming frost patterns. With very low temperatures outside, frost can appear on the bottom of the window even with double-pane energy-efficient windows because the air convection between two panes of glass ensures that the bottom part of the glazing unit is colder than the top part. On unheated motor vehicles, the frost usually forms on the outside surface of the glass first. The glass surface influences the shape of crystals, so imperfections, scratches, or dust can modify the way ice nucleates. The patterns in window frost form a fractal with a fractal dimension greater than one, but less than two. This is a consequence of the nucleation process being constrained to unfold in two dimensions, unlike a snowflake, which is shaped by a similar process, but forms in three dimensions and has a fractal dimension greater than two.[7]

If the indoor air is very humid, rather than moderately so, water first condenses in small droplets, and then freezes into clear ice.

Similar patterns of freezing may occur on other smooth vertical surfaces, but they seldom are as obvious or spectacular as on clear glass.

White frost edit

White frost is a solid deposition of ice that forms directly from water vapour contained in air.

White frost forms when relative humidity is above 90% and the temperature below −8 °C (18 °F), and it grows against the wind direction, since air arriving from windward has a higher humidity than leeward air, but the wind must not be strong, else it damages the delicate icy structures as they begin to form. White frost resembles a heavy coating of hoar frost with big, interlocking crystals, usually needle-shaped.

Rime edit

Rime is a type of ice deposition that occurs quickly, often under heavily humid and windy conditions.[8] Technically speaking, it is not a type of frost, since usually supercooled water drops are involved, in contrast to the formation of hoar frost, in which water vapour desublimates slowly and directly. Ships travelling through Arctic seas may accumulate large quantities of rime on the rigging. Unlike hoar frost, which has a feathery appearance, rime generally has an icy, solid appearance.

Black frost edit

 
Dead plant leaves during Winter Storm Uri in a backyard in Northern Mexico, with below freezing temperatures.

Black frost or ("killing frost") is not strictly speaking frost at all, because it is the condition seen in crops when the humidity is too low for frost to form, but the temperature falls so low that plant tissues freeze and die, becoming blackened, hence the term "black frost". Black frost often is called "killing frost" because white frost tends to be less cold, partly because the latent heat of freezing of the water reduces the temperature drop.

Effect on plants edit

Damage edit

 
Frost on the grass of a public park in November
 
Map of average first killing frost in Ohio from "Geography of Ohio," 1923

Many plants can be damaged or killed by freezing temperatures or frost. This varies with the type of plant, the tissue exposed, and how low temperatures get; a "light frost" of −2 to 0 °C (28 to 32 °F) damages fewer types of plants than a "hard frost" below −2 °C (28 °F).[9][10]

Plants likely to be damaged even by a light frost include vines—such as beans, grapes, squashes, melons—along with nightshades such as tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers. Plants that may tolerate (or even benefit from) frosts include:[11]

  • root vegetables (e.g. beets, carrots, parsnips, onions)
  • leafy greens (e.g. lettuces, spinach, chard, cucumber[12])
  • cruciferous vegetables (e.g. cabbages, cauliflower, bok choy, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, radishes, kale, collard, mustard, turnips, rutabagas)

Even those plants that tolerate frost may be damaged once temperatures drop even lower (below −4 °C or 25 °F).[9] Hardy perennials, such as Hosta, become dormant after the first frosts and regrow when spring arrives. The entire visible plant may turn completely brown until the spring warmth, or may drop all of its leaves and flowers, leaving the stem and stalk only. Evergreen plants, such as pine trees, withstand frost although all or most growth stops. Frost crack is a bark defect caused by a combination of low temperatures and heat from the winter sun.

Vegetation is not necessarily damaged when leaf temperatures drop below the freezing point of their cell contents. In the absence of a site nucleating the formation of ice crystals, the leaves remain in a supercooled liquid state, safely reaching temperatures of −4 to −12 °C (25 to 10 °F). However, once frost forms, the leaf cells may be damaged by sharp ice crystals. Hardening is the process by which a plant becomes tolerant to low temperatures. See also Cryobiology.

Certain bacteria, notably Pseudomonas syringae, are particularly effective at triggering frost formation, raising the nucleation temperature to about −2 °C (28 °F).[13] Bacteria lacking ice nucleation-active proteins (ice-minus bacteria) result in greatly reduced frost damage.[14]

Protection methods edit

 
Roses with protection against frost – Volksgarten, Vienna
 
Curitiba (Southern Brazil) is the coldest of Brazil's state capitals; the greenhouse of the Botanical Garden of Curitiba protects sensitive plants.

Typical measures to prevent frost or reduce its severity include one or more of:

  • Deploying powerful blowers to simulate wind, thereby preventing the formation of accumulations of cold air. There are variations on this theme. One variety is the wind machine, an engine-driven propeller mounted on a vertical pole that blows air almost horizontally. Wind machines were introduced as a method for frost protection in California during the 1920s, but they were not widely accepted until the 1940s and 1950s. Now, they are commonly used in many parts of the world.[15] Another is the selective inverted sink,[16] a device which prevents frost by drawing cold air from the ground and blowing it up through a chimney. It was originally developed to prevent frost damage to citrus fruits in Uruguay. In New Zealand, helicopters are used in similar fashion, especially in the vineyard regions such as Marlborough. By dragging down warmer air from the inversion layers, and preventing the ponding of colder air on the ground, the low-flying helicopters prevent damage to the fruit buds. As the operations are conducted at night, and have in the past involved up to 130 aircraft per night in one region, safety rules are strict.[17] Although not a dedicated method, wind turbines have a similar (although smaller) effect of vertically mixing air layers of different temperature.[18][19][20]
  • For high-value crops, farmers may wrap trees and use physical crop coverings.
  • For high-value crops grown over small areas, heating to slow the drop in temperature may be practical.
  • Production of smoke to reduce cooling by radiation
  • Spraying crops with a layer of water releases latent heat, preventing harmful freezing of the tissues of the plants that it coats.

Such measures need to be applied with discretion, because they may do more harm than good; for example, spraying crops with water can cause damage if the plants become overburdened with ice. An effective, low cost method for small crop farms and plant nurseries, exploits the latent heat of freezing. A pulsed irrigation timer[21] delivers water through existing overhead sprinklers at a low volumes to combat frosts down to −5 °C (23 °F).[21][22] If the water freezes, it gives off its latent heat, preventing the temperature of the foliage from falling much below zero.[22]

Frost-free areas edit

Frost-free areas are found mainly in the lowland tropics, where they cover almost all land except at altitudes above about 3,000 metres or 9,800 feet near the equator and around 2,000 metres or 6,600 feet in the semiarid areas in tropical regions. Some areas on the oceanic margins of the subtropics are also frost-free, as are highly oceanic areas near windward coasts. The most poleward frost-free areas are the lower altitudes of the Azores, Île Amsterdam, Île Saint-Paul, and Tristan da Cunha.

In the contiguous United States, southern Florida around Miami Beach and the Florida Keys are the only reliably frost-free areas, as well as the Channel Islands off the coast of California. The hardiness zones in these regions are 11a and 11b.

Permafrost edit

Permafrost is a layer of frozen earth underground which never heats above freezing even during summer months, remaining frozen year round. Although not frost in the atmospheric sense, it consists of dirt, soil, sand, rocks, clay, or organic matter (peat) bound firmly together by ice crystals, making the material very hard and difficult to penetrate. Permafrost exists in the colder climates of the Arctic and Antarctic, such as Russia, Canada, Alaska, Norway, Greenland, or Antarctica, where the warmer conditions of summer are insufficient to penetrate the insulation of the Earth to reach deep enough to thaw the permafrost layer. The permafrost may begin from the surface of the ground or many meters beneath it, and may extend from just a meter to over a thousand meters in thickness. Permafrost contains a significant portion of the Earth's water and carbon, and prevents surface water from penetrating very deep into the ground, making it responsible in part for the typical taiga and spruce bog environments common in northern latitudes.[23]

Personifications edit

Frost is personified in Russian culture as Ded Moroz. Indigenous peoples of Russia such as the Mordvins have their own traditions of frost deities.

English folklore tradition holds that Jack Frost, an elfish creature, is responsible for feathery patterns of frost found on windows on cold mornings.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "What causes frost?". from the original on 2007-12-10. Retrieved 2007-12-05.
  2. ^ a b John E. Oliver (1 January 2005). The Encyclopedia of World Climatology. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 382–. ISBN 978-1-4020-3264-6. from the original on 8 May 2016.
  3. ^ "Hoarfrost – Definition of hoarfrost by Merriam-Webster". merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2015-02-19.
  4. ^ Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Robert V. Rohli; Robert V. Rohli; Anthony J. Vega (13 December 2013). Climatology. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. pp. 381–. ISBN 978-1-284-05427-9. from the original on 19 May 2016.
  5. ^ "Weather Facts: Frost hollow – Weather UK – weatheronline.co.uk". weatheronline.co.uk. from the original on 2013-02-12.
  6. ^ David McClung; Peter A. Schaerer (2006). The Avalanche Handbook. The Mountaineers Books. pp. 72–. ISBN 978-0-89886-809-8. from the original on 2016-05-06.
  7. ^ West, Bruce; Mauro Bologna (2003). Physics of Fractal Operators. Paolo Grigolini. Springer. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-387-95554-4.
  8. ^ "Rime – Definition of rime by Merriam-Webster". merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2015-05-01.
  9. ^ a b . Botanical Interests. Archived from the original on 2013-11-13. Retrieved Nov 12, 2013.
  10. ^ Beerling, D. J.; Terry, A. C.; Mitchell, P. L.; Callaghan, T. V.; Gwynn-Jones, D.; Lee, J. A. (April 2001). "Time to chill: effects of simulated global change on leaf ice nucleation temperatures of subarctic vegetation". American Journal of Botany. 88 (4): 628–633. doi:10.2307/2657062. JSTOR 2657062. PMID 11302848.
  11. ^ "Fall vegetables vs. Summer vegetables". from the original on 2013-11-13.
  12. ^ Klosinska, Urszula; et al. (27 February 2014), "Low temperature seed germination of cucumber: genetic basis of the tolerance trait", Journal of Horticultural Research, de Gruyter, 21 (2): 125–130, doi:10.2478/johr-2013-0031
  13. ^ Maki LR, Galyan EL, Chang-Chien MM, Caldwell DR (1974). "Ice Nucleation Induced by Pseudomonas syringae". Applied Microbiology. 28 (3): 456–459. doi:10.1128/aem.28.3.456-459.1974. PMC 186742. PMID 4371331.
  14. ^ Lindow, Stephen E.; Deane C. Arny; Christen D. Upper (October 1982). "Bacterial Ice Nucleation: A Factor in Frost Injury to Plants". Plant Physiology. 70 (4): 1084–1089. doi:10.1104/pp.70.4.1084. PMC 1065830. PMID 16662618.
  15. ^ wind machine references: http://www.fao.org/3/y7223e/y7223e0d.htm ; https://extension.psu.edu/orchard-frost-protection-with-wind-machines ; http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/engineer/facts/10-045.htm ;
  16. ^ Selective Inverted Sink 2006-03-18 at the Wayback Machine Rolex Awards site (won award in Technology and Innovation category) 1998.
  17. ^ Helicopters Fight FrostVector, Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand, September/ October 2008, Page 8-9
  18. ^ Turbines and turbulence 2011-12-01 at the Wayback Machine, Nature (journal), 468, 1001, 23 December 2010, DOI:10.1038/4681001a, published online 22 December 2010.
  19. ^ Somnath Baidya Roy and Justin J. Traiteur. Impacts of wind farms on surface air temperatures, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 107, No. 42, October 19, 2010, p. 17,899.
  20. ^ Wind farms impacting weather 2010-09-06 at the Wayback Machine, Science Daily.
  21. ^ a b "A practical method of frost protection". from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  22. ^ a b Selders, Arthur W. (PDF). West Virginia university. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  23. ^ National Geographic – Permafrost

External links edit

  • Guide to Frost
  • How much do you know about frost? – BBC
  • American Meteorological Society, Glossary of Meteorology – Hoarfrost
  • The Weather Doctor – Weather Whys – Frost
  • "Frost" . New International Encyclopedia. 1906.

frost, this, article, about, deposit, surfaces, confused, with, freezing, temperature, other, uses, disambiguation, thin, layer, solid, surface, which, forms, from, water, vapor, that, deposits, onto, freezing, surface, forms, when, contains, more, water, vapo. This article is about deposit of ice on surfaces It is not to be confused with Freezing air temperature For other uses see Frost disambiguation Frost is a thin layer of ice on a solid surface which forms from water vapor that deposits onto a freezing surface Frost forms when the air contains more water vapor than it can normally hold at a specific temperature The process is similar to the formation of dew except it occurs below the freezing point of water typically without crossing through a liquid state A patch of grass showing three zones crystalline frost in the below freezing shade blue lower right frost in the warming but still below freezing strip most recently exposed to sunlight white center frost free region here the previous frost has melted from a more prolonged exposure to sunlight green upper left Air always contains a certain amount of water vapor depending on temperature Warmer air can hold more than colder air When the atmosphere contains more water than it can hold at a specific temperature its relative humidity rises above 100 becoming supersaturated and the excess water vapor is forced to deposit onto any nearby surface forming seed crystals The temperature at which frost will form is called the dew point and depends on the humidity of the air 1 When the temperature of the air drops below its dew point excess water vapor is forced out of solution resulting in a phase change directly from water vapor a gas to ice a solid As more water molecules are added to the seeds crystal growth occurs forming ice crystals Crystals may vary in size and shape from an even layer of numerous microscopic seeds to fewer but much larger crystals ranging from long dendritic crystals tree like growing across a surface acicular crystals needle like growing outward from the surface snowflake shaped crystals or even large knifelike blades of ice covering an object which depends on many factors such as temperature air pressure air motion and turbulence surface roughness and wettability and the level of supersaturation For example water vapor adsorbs to glass very well so automobile windows will often frost before the paint and large hoar frost crystals can grow very rapidly when the air is very cold calm and heavily saturated such as during an ice fog Frost may occur when warm moist air comes into contact with a cold surface cooling it below its dew point such as warm breath on a freezing window In the atmosphere it more often occurs when both the air and the surface are below freezing when the air experiences a drop in temperature bringing it below its dew point for example when the temperature falls after the Sun sets In temperate climates it most commonly appears on surfaces near the ground as fragile white crystals in cold climates it occurs in a greater variety of forms 2 The propagation of crystal formation occurs by the process of nucleation in specific water nucleation which is the same phenomenon responsible for the formation of clouds fog snow rain and other meteorological phenomena The ice crystals of frost form as the result of fractal process development The depth of frost crystals varies depending on the amount of time they have been accumulating and the concentration of the water vapor humidity Frost crystals may be invisible black clear translucent or if a mass of frost crystals scatters light in all directions the coating of frost appears white Types of frost include crystalline frost hoar frost or radiation frost from deposition of water vapor from air of low humidity white frost in humid conditions window frost on glass surfaces advection frost from cold wind over cold surfaces black frost without visible ice at low temperatures and very low humidity and rime under supercooled wet conditions 2 Plants that have evolved in warmer climates suffer damage when the temperature falls low enough to freeze the water in the cells that make up the plant tissue The tissue damage resulting from this process is known as frost damage Farmers in those regions where frost damage has been known to affect their crops often invest in substantial means to protect their crops from such damage Contents 1 Formation 2 Types 2 1 Hoar frost 2 2 Advection frost 2 3 Window frost 2 4 White frost 2 5 Rime 2 6 Black frost 3 Effect on plants 3 1 Damage 3 2 Protection methods 4 Frost free areas 5 Permafrost 6 Personifications 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksFormation edit nbsp Frost in the highest town in Venezuela Apartaderos Because of its location in an alpine tundra ecosystem called paramo a daily freeze and thaw cycle sometimes described as summer every day and winter every night exists If a solid surface is chilled below the dew point of the surrounding humid air and the surface itself is colder than freezing ice will form on it If the water deposits as a liquid that then freezes it forms a coating that may look glassy opaque or crystalline depending on its type Depending on context that process may also be called atmospheric icing The ice it produces differs in some ways from crystalline frost which consists of spicules of ice that typically project from the solid surface on which they grow The main difference between the ice coatings and frost spicules arises because the crystalline spicules grow directly from desublimation of water vapour from air and desublimation is not a factor in icing of freezing surfaces For desublimation to proceed the surface must be below the frost point of the air meaning that it is sufficiently cold for ice to form without passing through the liquid phase The air must be humid but not sufficiently humid to permit the condensation of liquid water or icing will result instead of desublimation The size of the crystals depends largely on the temperature the amount of water vapor available and how long they have been growing undisturbed As a rule except in conditions where supercooled droplets are present in the air frost will form only if the deposition surface is colder than the surrounding air For instance frost may be observed around cracks in cold wooden sidewalks when humid air escapes from the warmer ground beneath Other objects on which frost commonly forms are those with low specific heat or high thermal emissivity such as blackened metals hence the accumulation of frost on the heads of rusty nails The apparently erratic occurrence of frost in adjacent localities is due partly to differences of elevation the lower areas becoming colder on calm nights Where static air settles above an area of ground in the absence of wind the absorptivity and specific heat of the ground strongly influence the temperature that the trapped air attains Types editHoar frost edit nbsp Look up hoar frost in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp A spider web covered in air hoar frost nbsp Hoar frost on the snow nbsp Depth hoar imaged with optical left and scanning electron right microscopyHoar frost also hoarfrost radiation frost or pruina refers to white ice crystals deposited on the ground or loosely attached to exposed objects such as wires or leaves 3 They form on cold clear nights when conditions are such that heat radiates into outer space faster than it can be replaced from nearby warm objects or brought in by the wind Under suitable circumstances objects cool to below the frost point 4 of the surrounding air well below the freezing point of water Such freezing may be promoted by effects such as flood frost or frost pocket 5 These occur when ground level radiation cools air until it flows downhill and accumulates in pockets of very cold air in valleys and hollows Hoar frost may freeze in such low lying cold air even when the air temperature a few feet above ground is well above freezing The word hoar comes from an Old English adjective that means showing signs of old age In this context it refers to the frost that makes trees and bushes look like white hair Hoar frost may have different names depending on where it forms Air hoar is a deposit of hoar frost on objects above the surface such as tree branches plant stems and wires Surface hoar refers to fern like ice crystals directly deposited on snow ice or already frozen surfaces Crevasse hoar consists of crystals that form in glacial crevasses where water vapour can accumulate under calm weather conditions Depth hoar refers to faceted crystals that have slowly grown large within cavities beneath the surface of banks of dry snow Depth hoar crystals grow continuously at the expense of neighbouring smaller crystals so typically are visibly stepped and have faceted hollows When surface hoar covers sloping snowbanks the layer of frost crystals may create an avalanche risk when heavy layers of new snow cover the frosty surface furry crystals standing out from the old snow hold off the falling flakes forming a layer of voids that prevents the new snow layers from bonding strongly to the old snow beneath Ideal conditions for hoarfrost to form on snow are cold clear nights with very light cold air currents conveying humidity at the right rate for growth of frost crystals Wind that is too strong or warm destroys the furry crystals and thereby may permit a stronger bond between the old and new snow layers However if the winds are strong enough and cold enough to lay the crystals flat and dry carpeting the snow with cold loose crystals without removing or destroying them or letting them warm up and become sticky then the frost interface between the snow layers may still present an avalanche danger because the texture of the frost crystals differs from the snow texture and the dry crystals will not stick to fresh snow Such conditions still prevent a strong bond between the snow layers 6 In very low temperatures where fluffy surface hoar crystals form without subsequently being covered with snow strong winds may break them off forming a dust of ice particles and blowing them over the surface The ice dust then may form yukimarimo as has been observed in parts of Antarctica in a process similar to the formation of dust bunnies and similar structures nbsp A flower with advection frost on the edges of its petalsHoar frost and white frost also occur in man made environments such as in freezers or industrial cold storage facilities If such cold spaces or the pipes serving them are not well insulated and are exposed to ambient humidity the moisture will freeze instantly depending on the freezer temperature The frost may coat pipes thickly partly insulating them but such inefficient insulation still is a source of heat loss Advection frost edit Advection frost also called wind frost refers to tiny ice spikes that form when very cold wind is blowing over tree branches poles and other surfaces It looks like rimming on the edges of flowers and leaves and usually forms against the direction of the wind It can occur at any hour day or night Window frost edit Window frost also called fern frost or ice flowers forms when a glass pane is exposed to very cold air on the outside and warmer moderately moist air on the inside If the pane is a bad insulator for example if it is a single pane window water vapour condenses on the glass forming frost patterns With very low temperatures outside frost can appear on the bottom of the window even with double pane energy efficient windows because the air convection between two panes of glass ensures that the bottom part of the glazing unit is colder than the top part On unheated motor vehicles the frost usually forms on the outside surface of the glass first The glass surface influences the shape of crystals so imperfections scratches or dust can modify the way ice nucleates The patterns in window frost form a fractal with a fractal dimension greater than one but less than two This is a consequence of the nucleation process being constrained to unfold in two dimensions unlike a snowflake which is shaped by a similar process but forms in three dimensions and has a fractal dimension greater than two 7 If the indoor air is very humid rather than moderately so water first condenses in small droplets and then freezes into clear ice Similar patterns of freezing may occur on other smooth vertical surfaces but they seldom are as obvious or spectacular as on clear glass nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp White frost edit White frost is a solid deposition of ice that forms directly from water vapour contained in air White frost forms when relative humidity is above 90 and the temperature below 8 C 18 F and it grows against the wind direction since air arriving from windward has a higher humidity than leeward air but the wind must not be strong else it damages the delicate icy structures as they begin to form White frost resembles a heavy coating of hoar frost with big interlocking crystals usually needle shaped Rime edit Main article Rime ice Rime is a type of ice deposition that occurs quickly often under heavily humid and windy conditions 8 Technically speaking it is not a type of frost since usually supercooled water drops are involved in contrast to the formation of hoar frost in which water vapour desublimates slowly and directly Ships travelling through Arctic seas may accumulate large quantities of rime on the rigging Unlike hoar frost which has a feathery appearance rime generally has an icy solid appearance Black frost edit nbsp Dead plant leaves during Winter Storm Uri in a backyard in Northern Mexico with below freezing temperatures Black frost or killing frost is not strictly speaking frost at all because it is the condition seen in crops when the humidity is too low for frost to form but the temperature falls so low that plant tissues freeze and die becoming blackened hence the term black frost Black frost often is called killing frost because white frost tends to be less cold partly because the latent heat of freezing of the water reduces the temperature drop Effect on plants editDamage edit nbsp Frost on the grass of a public park in November nbsp Map of average first killing frost in Ohio from Geography of Ohio 1923Many plants can be damaged or killed by freezing temperatures or frost This varies with the type of plant the tissue exposed and how low temperatures get a light frost of 2 to 0 C 28 to 32 F damages fewer types of plants than a hard frost below 2 C 28 F 9 10 Plants likely to be damaged even by a light frost include vines such as beans grapes squashes melons along with nightshades such as tomatoes eggplants and peppers Plants that may tolerate or even benefit from frosts include 11 root vegetables e g beets carrots parsnips onions leafy greens e g lettuces spinach chard cucumber 12 cruciferous vegetables e g cabbages cauliflower bok choy broccoli Brussels sprouts radishes kale collard mustard turnips rutabagas Even those plants that tolerate frost may be damaged once temperatures drop even lower below 4 C or 25 F 9 Hardy perennials such as Hosta become dormant after the first frosts and regrow when spring arrives The entire visible plant may turn completely brown until the spring warmth or may drop all of its leaves and flowers leaving the stem and stalk only Evergreen plants such as pine trees withstand frost although all or most growth stops Frost crack is a bark defect caused by a combination of low temperatures and heat from the winter sun Vegetation is not necessarily damaged when leaf temperatures drop below the freezing point of their cell contents In the absence of a site nucleating the formation of ice crystals the leaves remain in a supercooled liquid state safely reaching temperatures of 4 to 12 C 25 to 10 F However once frost forms the leaf cells may be damaged by sharp ice crystals Hardening is the process by which a plant becomes tolerant to low temperatures See also Cryobiology Certain bacteria notably Pseudomonas syringae are particularly effective at triggering frost formation raising the nucleation temperature to about 2 C 28 F 13 Bacteria lacking ice nucleation active proteins ice minus bacteria result in greatly reduced frost damage 14 Protection methods edit nbsp Roses with protection against frost Volksgarten Vienna nbsp Curitiba Southern Brazil is the coldest of Brazil s state capitals the greenhouse of the Botanical Garden of Curitiba protects sensitive plants Typical measures to prevent frost or reduce its severity include one or more of Deploying powerful blowers to simulate wind thereby preventing the formation of accumulations of cold air There are variations on this theme One variety is the wind machine an engine driven propeller mounted on a vertical pole that blows air almost horizontally Wind machines were introduced as a method for frost protection in California during the 1920s but they were not widely accepted until the 1940s and 1950s Now they are commonly used in many parts of the world 15 Another is the selective inverted sink 16 a device which prevents frost by drawing cold air from the ground and blowing it up through a chimney It was originally developed to prevent frost damage to citrus fruits in Uruguay In New Zealand helicopters are used in similar fashion especially in the vineyard regions such as Marlborough By dragging down warmer air from the inversion layers and preventing the ponding of colder air on the ground the low flying helicopters prevent damage to the fruit buds As the operations are conducted at night and have in the past involved up to 130 aircraft per night in one region safety rules are strict 17 Although not a dedicated method wind turbines have a similar although smaller effect of vertically mixing air layers of different temperature 18 19 20 For high value crops farmers may wrap trees and use physical crop coverings For high value crops grown over small areas heating to slow the drop in temperature may be practical Production of smoke to reduce cooling by radiation Spraying crops with a layer of water releases latent heat preventing harmful freezing of the tissues of the plants that it coats Such measures need to be applied with discretion because they may do more harm than good for example spraying crops with water can cause damage if the plants become overburdened with ice An effective low cost method for small crop farms and plant nurseries exploits the latent heat of freezing A pulsed irrigation timer 21 delivers water through existing overhead sprinklers at a low volumes to combat frosts down to 5 C 23 F 21 22 If the water freezes it gives off its latent heat preventing the temperature of the foliage from falling much below zero 22 Frost free areas editFrost free areas are found mainly in the lowland tropics where they cover almost all land except at altitudes above about 3 000 metres or 9 800 feet near the equator and around 2 000 metres or 6 600 feet in the semiarid areas in tropical regions Some areas on the oceanic margins of the subtropics are also frost free as are highly oceanic areas near windward coasts The most poleward frost free areas are the lower altitudes of the Azores Ile Amsterdam Ile Saint Paul and Tristan da Cunha In the contiguous United States southern Florida around Miami Beach and the Florida Keys are the only reliably frost free areas as well as the Channel Islands off the coast of California The hardiness zones in these regions are 11a and 11b Permafrost editPermafrost is a layer of frozen earth underground which never heats above freezing even during summer months remaining frozen year round Although not frost in the atmospheric sense it consists of dirt soil sand rocks clay or organic matter peat bound firmly together by ice crystals making the material very hard and difficult to penetrate Permafrost exists in the colder climates of the Arctic and Antarctic such as Russia Canada Alaska Norway Greenland or Antarctica where the warmer conditions of summer are insufficient to penetrate the insulation of the Earth to reach deep enough to thaw the permafrost layer The permafrost may begin from the surface of the ground or many meters beneath it and may extend from just a meter to over a thousand meters in thickness Permafrost contains a significant portion of the Earth s water and carbon and prevents surface water from penetrating very deep into the ground making it responsible in part for the typical taiga and spruce bog environments common in northern latitudes 23 Personifications editFurther information Ded Moroz and Father Frost fairy tale Frost is personified in Russian culture as Ded Moroz Indigenous peoples of Russia such as the Mordvins have their own traditions of frost deities English folklore tradition holds that Jack Frost an elfish creature is responsible for feathery patterns of frost found on windows on cold mornings Gallery editFrost nbsp Frost on a nettle nbsp Fern frost on a window nbsp Frost on a thistle in Hausdulmen North Rhine Westphalia Germany nbsp Window frost nbsp Frost on plant leaves in the Himalayas nbsp Surface hoar in Alaska nbsp Hoar frost in Julian Alps nbsp Frost on birch tree in Stockholm nbsp Frost on grass in Ranu Pani East Java Indonesia nbsp Frost on birch stem in Norway nbsp Light frost on grass in Western Sydney New South Wales Australia nbsp An oak leaf with frost in SwedenSee also editBlack ice Frost temperature Frost heaving Frost line Frostbite Ground frost Icing nautical Needle iceReferences edit What causes frost Archived from the original on 2007 12 10 Retrieved 2007 12 05 a b John E Oliver 1 January 2005 The Encyclopedia of World Climatology Springer Science amp Business Media pp 382 ISBN 978 1 4020 3264 6 Archived from the original on 8 May 2016 Hoarfrost Definition of hoarfrost by Merriam Webster merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2015 02 19 Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Robert V Rohli Robert V Rohli Anthony J Vega 13 December 2013 Climatology Jones amp Bartlett Publishers pp 381 ISBN 978 1 284 05427 9 Archived from the original on 19 May 2016 Weather Facts Frost hollow Weather UK weatheronline co uk weatheronline co uk Archived from the original on 2013 02 12 David McClung Peter A Schaerer 2006 The Avalanche Handbook The Mountaineers Books pp 72 ISBN 978 0 89886 809 8 Archived from the original on 2016 05 06 West Bruce Mauro Bologna 2003 Physics of Fractal Operators Paolo Grigolini Springer p 46 ISBN 978 0 387 95554 4 Rime Definition of rime by Merriam Webster merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2015 05 01 a b Frost Tolerance of Vegetables Botanical Interests Archived from the original on 2013 11 13 Retrieved Nov 12 2013 Beerling D J Terry A C Mitchell P L Callaghan T V Gwynn Jones D Lee J A April 2001 Time to chill effects of simulated global change on leaf ice nucleation temperatures of subarctic vegetation American Journal of Botany 88 4 628 633 doi 10 2307 2657062 JSTOR 2657062 PMID 11302848 Fall vegetables vs Summer vegetables Archived from the original on 2013 11 13 Klosinska Urszula et al 27 February 2014 Low temperature seed germination of cucumber genetic basis of the tolerance trait Journal of Horticultural Research de Gruyter 21 2 125 130 doi 10 2478 johr 2013 0031 Maki LR Galyan EL Chang Chien MM Caldwell DR 1974 Ice Nucleation Induced by Pseudomonas syringae Applied Microbiology 28 3 456 459 doi 10 1128 aem 28 3 456 459 1974 PMC 186742 PMID 4371331 Lindow Stephen E Deane C Arny Christen D Upper October 1982 Bacterial Ice Nucleation A Factor in Frost Injury to Plants Plant Physiology 70 4 1084 1089 doi 10 1104 pp 70 4 1084 PMC 1065830 PMID 16662618 wind machine references http www fao org 3 y7223e y7223e0d htm https extension psu edu orchard frost protection with wind machines http www omafra gov on ca english engineer facts 10 045 htm Selective Inverted Sink Archived 2006 03 18 at the Wayback Machine Rolex Awards site won award in Technology and Innovation category 1998 Helicopters Fight Frost Vector Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand September October 2008 Page 8 9 Turbines and turbulence Archived 2011 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Nature journal 468 1001 23 December 2010 DOI 10 1038 4681001a published online 22 December 2010 Somnath Baidya Roy and Justin J Traiteur Impacts of wind farms on surface air temperatures Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Vol 107 No 42 October 19 2010 p 17 899 Wind farms impacting weather Archived 2010 09 06 at the Wayback Machine Science Daily a b A practical method of frost protection Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2011 a b Selders Arthur W Frost protection with sprinkler irrigation PDF West Virginia university Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2011 Retrieved 31 October 2011 National Geographic PermafrostExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frost nbsp Look up frost in Wiktionary the free dictionary Guide to Frost How much do you know about frost BBC American Meteorological Society Glossary of Meteorology Hoarfrost The Weather Doctor Weather Whys Frost Frost New International Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frost amp oldid 1192782421, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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