Ice pellets

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Ice pellets (also referred to as sleet by the United States National Weather Service[1]) are a form of precipitation consisting of small, translucent balls of ice. Ice pellets are usually smaller than hailstones[2] and are different from graupel, which is made of rime, or rain and snow mixed, which is soft. Ice pellets often bounce when they hit the ground, and generally do not freeze into a solid mass unless mixed with freezing rain. The METAR code for ice pellets is PL.

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Formation [edit]

An accumulation of ice pellets
SleetSounding.gif

Ice pellets form when a layer of above-freezing air is located between 1,500 and 3,000 meters (4,921 and 9,843 ft) above the ground, with sub-freezing air both above and below it. This causes the partial or complete melting of any snowflakes falling through the warm layer. As they fall back into the sub-freezing layer closer to the surface, they re-freeze into ice pellets. However, if the sub-freezing layer beneath the warm layer is too small, the precipitation will not have time to re-freeze, and freezing rain will be the result at the surface. A temperature profile showing a warm layer above the ground is most likely to be found in advance of a warm front during the cold season,[3] but can occasionally be found behind a passing cold front.

Effects [edit]

In most parts of the world, ice pellets only occur for brief periods and never accumulate a significant amount. However, across the eastern United States and southeastern Canada, warm air flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico ahead of a strong synoptic-scale storm system can overrun cold, dense air at the surface for many hundreds of miles for an extended period of time. In these areas, ice pellet accumulations of 2–5 cm (0.8–2.0 in) are not unheard of. The effects of a significant accumulation of ice pellets are not unlike an accumulation of snow. One significant difference is that for the same volume of snow, an equal volume of ice pellets is significantly heavier and thus more difficult to clear away. Additionally, a volume of ice pellets takes significantly longer to melt compared to an equal volume of fresh snowfall.

Ice pellets next to a U.S. penny for scale

See also [edit]

References [edit]