I started noticing this interesting weather phenomena this week. As I was driving to work in the dark, I kept seeing these glistening diamond-like crystals on the grass, trees, bushes, signs, etc. As my truck lights caught them, they presented beautiful displays and flashes of sparkling light.
By day, they appeared to have grown and throughout the week, they have continued to enlarge and cling to just about everything. I asked one of the guys at work what was causing that effect was and he told me the crystals were called hoarfrost.
T. Neil Davis is a seismologist at the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and here's what he says about hoarfrost:
"In late winter, intricate buildups of hoarfrost crystals have formed on all types of outdoor objects.
Among winter's beauties are the intricate crystals--called hoarfrost--that form on branches, wires, poles and other objects. Hoarfrost is a sort of wintertime cousin to summer's dew and develops by similar processes.
Dew and hoarfrost accumulate on objects when there is more moisture in the air than the air can carry. Warm air carries in suspension more liquid water than does cold air.
The temperature at which the air is totally saturated is called the dew point. If the temperature of humid air is lowered until the humidity is 100%, then the dew point has been reached. Further cooling requires that the air lose part of its suspended water; the loss can come through rainfall, snowfall or the formation of dew or hoarfrost.
Curiously enough, pure water suspended in clean air remains in liquid form down to temperatures near -40°C (also -40°F). Below that temperature, the liquid droplets turn to ice--ice fog being a possible result. However, the normal ice fog known and loved in some northern cities comes from man made injection of water into cold still air.
If when air is cooled down it contains enough water to cause the dew point to be above freezing, then dew forms. But if the air is sufficiently dry that the dew point is below 0°C (32°F), then hoarfrost forms.
Hoarfrost consists of crystalline structures that grow from water vapor evaporated from liquid droplets suspended in air. Once hoar-frost crystals form, they can remain as long as conditions for their existence are favorable. But if the crystals or the air around them are warmed up, evaporation from the crystal surfaces leads to their demise. Hence in late winter the sun's warming rays will remove the hoar-frost from the south sides of objects.
Hoarfrost crystals are unique and quite beautiful. It's worth it to look at them closely. They occur in an intricate variety of forms--needles, cups, plates, fern-like and feather-like--depending upon the temperature at which they developed."
Those are so beautiful! What a neat thing to see. Something you would NEVER see here in Charleston.
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