What was that column of light extending above the setting sun?

A vertical shaft of light extending above a setting or rising sun is called a sun pillar. You could have seen this optical phenomenon if you were looking at the sunset on Jan. 18.

While sun pillars look like vertical beams of light projected above the sun, they are actually a collection of reflections of millions of ice crystals floating in the atmosphere.

This optical feature is caused by the reflection of sunlight off tiny ice crystals in a cloud that is near the horizon. Reflection takes place at the boundary of an object. Flat, six-sided, plate-like ice crystals floating in the atmosphere act like small mirrors, reflecting the sun’s light at their flat surfaces.

When in the right location between you and the sun, the ice crystals act like mirrors and reflect sun light off their surfaces toward your eyes. If the crystals were not there, the sunbeams that they are reflecting would never be seen by you; those beams of light would be traveling far above your head.

On this same day, the snow at times sparkled. As with the sun pillar, flat crystals resting on top of a blanket of snow can act like tiny mirrors, reflecting a portion of the sun’s image toward your eye.

Each “sparkle” is an individual ice crystal reflecting the sun’s image. Whether we see the sparkle depends on the angle formed between where the sun is, where we are looking and the angle at which the snowflake is resting. If all these conditions are right, occasionally as we walk by a field of snow, we’ll see it glitter because of how the sun is being reflected by the different crystals of snow.

Category: Phenomena

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What is the wind chill temperature?

On the cold and windy days of last week, you probably tried to keep yourself warm by wearing appropriate clothing and seeking shelter from the wind.

It feels colder in the wind because the wind sweeps away heated air in contact with your body and replaces it with colder air.

Whereas still air is a poor heat conductor (which is why storm windows have air trapped between glass panes), moving air is not!

The cooling power of the wind is measured by the wind chill factor. The wind chill describes the increased loss of heat by the movement of the air. The wind chill is relevant to humans and other animals needing to maintain a constant temperature that is higher than the surroundings.

The wind chill factor cannot be measured with a thermometer; it must be computed. The wind chill temperature translates your body’s heat losses under the current temperature and wind conditions into the air temperature with a 3-knot wind that would produce equivalent heat losses.

This is not an easy conversion. The original wind chill formula was devised by Antarctic explorer Paul Siple in 1945. More recent research has revealed some flaws in Siple’s work, such as assuming that the wind at face level is equal to the wind at 33 feet above the surface. The National Weather Service updated its wind chill temperature calculation in November 2001.

Dr. Ed Hopkins, Wisconsin’s assistant state climatologist, has computed the wind chill temperatures for all the hourly temperature and wind speed combinations available from Truax/Dane County Regional airport since January 1948. Madison’s lowest wind chill temperature was -54.3 at 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. on January 20, 1985 — the same day of President Ronald Reagan’s second inauguration, which was held indoors because of the cold Washington, D.C., weather and because it was a Sunday. In the cold air outbreak of last week, the coldest wind chill temperature was -43 at 9 a.m. on Jan. 6.

Category: Meteorology

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How unusual is this kind of cold ?

We are at the beginning of the most intense cold air outbreak of the winter thus far with high temperatures today not likely to rise above zero. It may be similarly cold tomorrow.

Having two consecutive days in a row with daytime high temperatures below zero is noteworthy in Madison. The last time that occurred in town was in early February 1996 (Feb. 2 and 3).

In fact, a daily high temperature colder than minus 5 has only occurred 12 times in the last 33 years, while a daily high lower than minus 10 has only been recorded on four occasions in that time period.

In addition, the morning low on Monday is likely to be near 20 below zero. The last time Madison saw a morning low temperature that low was on December 25, 2000, when the low was minus 21, part of a 12-day stretch during which 11 days had morning lows below zero.

Overnight lows of minus 20 or colder are not common in Madison, though not unprecedented. Since 1980 it has happened 26 times and since 1990, 12 times: Jan. 15, 16, and 18-20, and Dec. 31, 1994; Jan. 31, Feb. 2, 3 and 4, 1996; Jan. 5, 1999; and Dec. 25, 2000.

The low of minus 29 recorded on Feb. 3, 1996, tied for the third coldest of all time in Madison.

Whether the current cold outbreak meets or exceeds any of these records will be quite beside the point as we all try to bear the brunt of it over the next couple of days.

Category: Climate

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How does freezing rain form?

Southern Wisconsin experienced freezing rain and freezing drizzle just before the start of the holidays.

When particles falling from clouds reach the surface as precipitation, they do so primarily as rain, snow, freezing rain or sleet.

Where we live, most precipitation particles are frozen at one time during their formation. What determines the precipitation type at the surface is the temperature between the cloud bottom and the ground.

In winter, precipitation usually begins falling out of a cloud as ice particles. If the temperature underneath a cloud stays below freezing all the way to the ground, the ice crystals never melt and snow falls.

If the temperature is above freezing below the cloud bottom to the ground, the frozen particles melt into liquid droplets that reach the surface and this is called rain.

Ice storms occur when precipitation particles melt and then fall through a layer of subfreezing air near the ground.

Freezing rain forms when a very shallow layer of cold air is at the surface, causing the freshly melted raindrops to freeze on contact with exposed objects on the ground, which has a temperature below freezing.

Sleet results when the layer of subfreezing air at the surface extends upward far enough so that raindrop freezes into a little ball of ice.

When sleet hits the surface, it bounces and does not coat objects with a sheet of ice. Freezing rain covers everything in a sheet of ice, creating shimmering and treacherous road conditions.

Freezing rain is the precipitation type with the highest rate of accidents and death during the weather event. The number of deaths due to accidents is larger for snow events, but that is because snow is more common than freezing rain. Southern Wisconsin averages only about 20 hours of freezing rain a year.

Category: Meteorology

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How does this month’s cold and snow stack up?

Winter officially began at 11:11 a.m. on Saturday with the winter solstice, but everyone knows it has felt like winter for quite some time as we have endured a cold (and snowy) first two-thirds of December.

In fact, through the first 18 days of the month, the average temperature has been 6.2 degrees colder than normal and we have had 9.9 inches of snow accumulate over 10 snowy days (days on which at least a trace of snow has fallen).

December is nearly our snowiest month on average, logging 12.6 inches in a normal year over nine snowy days. (January logs 13.1 inches.) The 5-plus inches of snow that blanketed the Madison area Sunday puts us over the monthly average.

Of course, almost no matter what happens the rest of this month, we will not approach the record-setting cold and snow of December 2000. During that month, the average high temperature was only 22.1 degrees (10 degrees below normal) and we accumulated 35 inches of snow over 22 snowy days!

That month was the second-snowiest December on record (topped only by December 2008 with 40.4 inches) and the fourth-coldest December ever — a rare combination indeed.

Unfortunately, the start of the season offers no historical clues about how it will progress. After our cold and snowy December 2000, the rest of the season (January and February) was much warmer than normal and only 17.2 inches of additional snow fell.

After the record snowy December 2008, which came on the heels of our snowiest winter ever in 2007-08 (101.4 inches), we had another 32 inches of snow in January and February, well above the normal for those two months (21.8 inches).

Thus, it appears that anything could happen as the rest of the winter unfolds.

Category: Seasons

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