bounded by the 0°C isotherm at 850-hPa level and the
32°F isotherm at the surface, when superimposed upon
the precipitation area, separated the snow-rain
precipitation shield in a high percentages of cases. A
range of -2° to -4°C at the 850-hPa level should be used
along coastal areas, and also behind deep cold lows, At
mountain stations a higher level would have to be used.
A technique that uses temperatures at mandatory
levels (surface, 1000-, 850-, 700-, and 500-hPa, etc.) is
advantageous because of the availability of charts at
these levels. There is, however, the occasional problem
where temperature inversions are located near the 850-
or 700-hPa levels, so that the temperature of one level
may not be indicative of the layer above or below. This
difficulty can be overcome by using thickness, which is
a measure of the mean temperature of the layer.
THICKNESS. The National Weather Service has
examined both the 1,000- to 700-hPa and 1,000- to
500-hPa thickness limits for the eastern half of the
United States.
A generalized study of 1,000- to 500-hPa thickness
as a predictor of precipitation forms in the United States
was made by A. J. Wagner, More complete details on
this study can be found in The Prediction of Snow vs
Rain, Forecasting Guide No. 2.
Wagners data was taken from a study of 40
locations in the United States for the colder months of a
2-year period.
Cases were limited to surface
temperatures between 10°F and 50°F. The form of
precipitation in each case was considered as belonging
in one of two categories-frozen which includes snow,
sleet, granular snow, and snow crystals; and unfrozen,
which includes rain, rain and snow mixed, drizzle, and
freezing rain and drizzle.
Equal probability, or critical thickness values, were
obtained from the data at each location. From this study
it was clear that the critical thickness values increase
with increasing altitude. This altitude relationship is
attributable to the fact that a sizable portion of the
thickness stratum is nonexistent for high-altitude
stations, and obviously does not participate in the
melting process.
To compensate for this, the equal
probability thickness values must increase with station
elevation. For higher altitude stations, thickness values
between the 850- to 500-hPa or 700- to 500-hPa
stratums, as appropriate, should prove to be better
dated to precipitation form.
The Wagner equal probability chart is reproduced
in figure 4-21.
Wagners study also indicates that the form of
precipitation can be specified with a certainty of 75
percent at plus or minus 30 meters from the equal
probability value, increasing to 90 percent
certainty at plus or minus 90 meters from this value.
Stability is the parameter that accounts for the
variability of precipitation for a given thickness at a
given point. This fact is taken into account in the
following reamer: if the forecast precipitation is due
to a warm front that is more stable than usual, the
line separating rain from frozen precipitation is
shifted toward higher thickness values. Over the Great
Lakes, where snow occurs in unstable, or stable
conditions, the equal probability thickness is lower
than that shown in figure 4-21 for snow showers, and
higher than that shown in figure 4-21 for warm frontal
snow.
HEIGHT OF THE FREEZING LEVEL. The
height of the freezing level is one of the most critical
thermal parameters in determining whether snow can
reach the ground.
It was pointed out earlier that
theoretical and observational evidence indicates that
a freezing level averaging 1,200 feet or more above
the surface is usually required to ensure that most of
the snow will melt before reaching the surface. This
figure of 1,200 feet can thus be considered as a
critical or equal probability value of the freezing
level.
COMBINED THERMAL PARAMETERS.
From the foregoing discussion, you can conclude
that no one method, when used alone, is a good
discriminator in the snow versus rain forecasting
problem. Therefore, you should use a combination of
the surface temperature, height of the freezing level,
850-hPa temperature, and the 1,000-to 700-hPa and /or
1,000- to 500-hPa thicknesses to arrive at the forecast,
There is generally a high correlation between the
850-hPa temperature, and the 1,000- to 700-hPa
thickness and between the 700-hPa temperature and the
1,000- to 500-hPa thickness. Certainly an accurate
temperature forecast for these two levels would yield an
approximate thickness value for discriminating
purposes.
Additional Snow versus Rain Techniques
The determining factor in the form of precipitation
in this study was found to be the distribution of
temperature and moisture between the surface and the
700-hPa level at the time of the beginning of
precipitation. The median level of 850-hPa was studied
in conjunction with the precipitation area and the 32°F
4-24