Fog
Fog is cloud in contact with the ground. It 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 thermal
(infrared) radiation
in calm conditions with clear sky.
The cool ground then produces condensation
in the nearby air by conduction.
In perfect calm the fog layer can be less than a metre
deep but turbulence
can promote a thicker layer. Radiation fog is common in autumn
and usually does not last long past sunrise.
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- Advection fog occurs when moist air passes over cool
ground by advection
(wind) and is cooled. This
form is most common at sea
when tropical air
encounters cooler higher-latitude
waters. It is also extremely common as a warm front passes over an area
with significant snowpack.
- Steam fog is the most localized form and is created by
cold air passing over much warmer water. The air is quickly saturated by
evaporation
and the condensation thus created is seen as wispy steam.
Steam fog is most common in polar regions, and around deeper and larger
lakes in late autumn
and early winter. It
is closely related to lake-effect
snow and lake-effect rain, and often causes freezing fog, or sometimes
hoar frost.
- Precipitation fog (or frontal fog) forms
as precipitation
falls into drier air below the cloud, the liquid droplets evaporate
into water vapour. The water vapour cools and increases the moisture content
of the air. As the air saturates below the cloud, fog forms.
- Upslope fog forms when winds blow air up a slope
(called orographic lift), adiabatical
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 the result of a temperature
inversion caused by heavier cold air settling into the valley, with
warmer air passing over the mountains above. It is essentially radiation
fog confined by local topology,
and can last for several days in calm conditions.
- Ice fog is any kind of fog where the droplets have frozen
into extremely tiny crystals
of ice in midair. Generally
this requires temperatures well below the freezing
point, making it common only in and near the Arctic
and Antarctic
regions. Extremely small amounts of this falling from the sky form a type
of precipitation
called ice crystals, often
reported in Barrow,
Alaska.
- Freezing fog is when liquid fog droplets freeze to surfaces, forming white rime ice. This is very common on mountaintops which are exposed to low clouds. It is equivalent to freezing rain, and essentially the same as the ice which forms inside a freezer which is not of the "frostless" or "frost-free" type.
Fog reduces visibility. Some vehicles have radar etc., cars have to drive slower and use more lights. Especially dangerous is when fog is very localized, and the driver is caught by surprise.


