The Size and Shape of Raindrops - Sixty Symbols

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  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
  • All about how raindrops form and fall. Featuring Professor Mike Merrifield.
    More links and info below ↓ ↓ ↓
    More with Professor Merrifield: bit.ly/Merrifield_Playlist
    Our weather-themed playlist: bit.ly/Weather_Videos
    Professor Merrifield on Twitter: / astromikemerri
    Deep Sky Videos astronomy videos: / deepskyvideos
    Papers from this video...
    STUDIES OF RAINDROPS AND RAINDROP PHENOMENA
    ftp://ftp.library.noaa.gov/docs.lib/htdocs/rescue/mwr/032/mwr-032-10-0450.pdf
    THE DISTRIBUTION OF RAINDROPS WITH SIZE
    journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/...
    Single-drop fragmentation determines size distribution of raindrops
    10.1038/nphys1340
    Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com/
    We're on Facebook at / sixtysymbols
    And Twitter at / sixtysymbols
    This project features scientists from The University of Nottingham
    bit.ly/NottsPhysics
    Patreon: / sixtysymbols
    Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran
    www.bradyharanblog.com
    Email list: eepurl.com/YdjL9
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Komentáře • 271

  • @frasersteen
    @frasersteen Před 4 lety +458

    That flour-raindrop experiment is beautifully simple. Definitely should be done in schools a lot more.

    • @DackxJaniels
      @DackxJaniels Před 4 lety +18

      I pity the fool who goes to school near death valley. 50 years old - still waiting to get their 2 grade science grade. They can't complete their raindrop lab.

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil Před 4 lety +6

      @@DackxJaniels That might be actually why this simple experiment is almost never done in schools (It is somewhat likely that someone had tried it in a school setting.)
      The experiment is very weather depended so you need to prepare it for one of those rainy days. And I think having that prep work and then the experiment on standby is a bit more of a hassle then in worth. Though of course there plenty of places in the world that get rain pretty regular so it might be something worth doing then.

    • @boltaurelius376
      @boltaurelius376 Před 4 lety +9

      @@Cythil The only place to do this experiment is next to a lit BBQ. Thats the only way to ensure it rains.

    • @moistmayonese1205
      @moistmayonese1205 Před 4 lety +1

      Fraser Steen Experiments might be interesting but they are not that efficient tools for learning. But they might spark interst. However, they interfere routine, which is the most important oart of learning.

    • @1.4142
      @1.4142 Před 4 lety

      Doesn't rain for 3-5 months in a row in the summer in the bay area.

  • @XsavioR38
    @XsavioR38 Před 4 lety +186

    These videos are like sitting down and having coffee with some extremely bright people , something everyone can benefit from. keep it up.
    '

    • @ZeedijkMike
      @ZeedijkMike Před 4 lety +2

      I was actually having a cup of coffee while watching this video.

    • @Gjorten
      @Gjorten Před 4 lety

      @@ZeedijkMike ditto :)

  • @NJP-Supremacist
    @NJP-Supremacist Před 4 lety +172

    "...so the raindrops which fall on your head probably are more or less round."
    Isn't everything more or less round to a physicist though?

    • @trafalgarla
      @trafalgarla Před 4 lety +56

      "Assume a spherical cow..."

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk Před 4 lety +30

      @@trafalgarla "In an airless, frictionless space..."

    • @detectivejonesw
      @detectivejonesw Před 4 lety +3

      😂😂😂😂

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před 4 lety +3

      More or less.

    • @UODZU-P
      @UODZU-P Před 4 lety +11

      @@trafalgarla I never understood the spherical cow metaphor because topologically speaking a cow is more similar to a torus

  • @devangliya7131
    @devangliya7131 Před 4 lety +161

    Always great to see Prof. Merrifield!

  • @ParkerUAS
    @ParkerUAS Před 4 lety +23

    Having been a pilot for many years and flying through various inclement weather situations I have the following observations to bounce off the physicists.
    1. There is time for the rain drip to cycle through the various sizes due to updrafts. A perfect example is a hail stone. It starts small and freezes at height, then falls and picks up water on the surface. It gets picked up again and refreeze. Like an onion it has layers and each layer is a trip through the storm. The stronger the storm, the more layers and larger of the hail. Therefore, if the storm is the same as a hail storm, but the water doesn't freeze, why wouldn't it still go through the cycle?
    2. Flying through the mid level of nimbostratus is where I have hit what I would consider the largest raindrops I have seen. At those points it sometimes is like going through a sheet of water, there doesn't seen to be individual drops just a wall of water to punch through.

    • @JoseAbell
      @JoseAbell Před 4 lety +1

      Guys! Can someone please address this? Sheets of water on the sky? I need a video.

    • @fewwiggle
      @fewwiggle Před 4 lety

      @@JoseAbell I think that is more metaphorical -- the rain is so dense that it "feels" like a solid (especially if you are moving into it). I've experienced something like this in thunderstorms in the midwest where it is like being embedded in a waterfall.

  • @marksimpson2321
    @marksimpson2321 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Im so grateful to Brady and Professor Merrifield for making these clips. Interesting science!

  • @borjadelarco6052
    @borjadelarco6052 Před 4 lety +7

    I'm a Naval Architect. I've always been told at uni that the two resistances ships have to overcome are friction resistance and wave-induced resistance. Once or twice been told that wave-induced resistance was different from friction resistance because of surface tension...
    But never quite understood why and that's something this video addresses perfectly. Hydrogen bonds cause water molecules to stay together, and that gives rise to this potential energy on the very surface (or the boundary layer between two fluids, in this case, water and air). This channel is just one marvellous thing for all of the curious people who love science and don't really have someone to learn from or talk to about it.
    Froude was right and didn't even know why!
    PS: now friction resistance which encompasses tons of different resistances like pressure resistance, viscous resistance, viscous pressure resistance, etc is a whole world apart... *As Sir Horace Lamb would put it: **_I am an old man now, and when I die and go to heaven, there are two matters on which I hope for enlightenment. One is quantum electrodynamics and the other is the turbulent motion of fluids. About the former, I am really rather optimistic._*

  • @dockmeister8480
    @dockmeister8480 Před 4 lety +54

    My favorite weatherman is back!

  • @obiwan8972
    @obiwan8972 Před 4 lety +75

    Happy to see u back prof

  • @cpt_nordbart
    @cpt_nordbart Před 4 lety +16

    Reminds me of Douglas Adams book.. I think it was"So Long and Thanks for the Fish"... With a truck driver who is constantly in rain. And has his own scale of different rain types.

  • @emarsk77
    @emarsk77 Před 4 lety +3

    I love the relaxed chat vibe of this channel.

  • @KepaTairua
    @KepaTairua Před 4 lety +13

    I've been missing sixty symbols vids! Always love a Professor Mike vid as well.

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982 Před 4 lety +24

    The stereotypical rain drop shape I guess comes from a dripping water tap.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 4 lety +2

      It does.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 4 lety

      @pjd412 Shouldn't low aerodynamic drag be a much flatter shape, shard-like? I don't think I can agree: practical aerodynamics is a very ancient subject manifesting in spears and arrows for example, which do not look at all like the stereotypical drop shape.

  • @Kyle-li8wi
    @Kyle-li8wi Před 4 lety +2

    This is exactly the information I have been searching for most my life. I just did not know it. But now that I do, I am happy.

  • @knoop7102
    @knoop7102 Před 4 lety +6

    Yesssss I missed you Sixy Symbols!

  • @AverageBrick
    @AverageBrick Před 4 lety +21

    Great video, really well paced as well!

  • @keynesonsteroids
    @keynesonsteroids Před 4 lety +21

    Interesting and the surface tension energy was well explained. Thank you for making this video!

    • @Jesse__H
      @Jesse__H Před 4 lety +4

      that part really was well-explained.

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk Před 4 lety +2

      I know! I'd never heard it explained that way before. Surface tension has always been something that I just took as given without thinking about "why does this exist?", but suddenly it makes so much sense.

    • @Rubensgardens.Skogsmuseum
      @Rubensgardens.Skogsmuseum Před 4 lety

      So then you are clear about why some liquids have less surface tension than water?

  • @xyz.ijk.
    @xyz.ijk. Před 4 lety

    Beyond beautiful.
    Thanks Brady.

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS Před 4 lety +47

    Fascinating! He should talk about the weather on other planets too. For example, he could talk about how raindrops of liquid methane on Titan would fall differently than on Earth.

    • @beliot3077
      @beliot3077 Před 4 lety +3

      I wanna see that.

    • @RasperHelpdesk
      @RasperHelpdesk Před 4 lety +1

      With a thinner atmosphere I'd expect droplets could get far bigger before hitting the threshold that would trigger the splitting action.

    • @martingrundy5475
      @martingrundy5475 Před 4 lety

      Would they not also fall faster though due to the thinner atmosphere?
      I wonder if one effect would cancel or partially tend to cancel out the effect of the other?
      Would be fascinating to see. Even if that is true, slightly larger droplets at a greater velocity would make for some effect.

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 4 lety +1

      @@martingrundy5475 The atmosphere is *not* thinner; it's actually *thicker.*

    • @adamrenwick7234
      @adamrenwick7234 Před 4 lety

      What about sulfuric acid raindrops on Venus? Different surface tension, different atmospheric pressure and different g value might mean there's enough time for multiple cycles of formation-disintegration…

  • @michaelc2245
    @michaelc2245 Před 4 lety +3

    Hi Brady,
    I would love to see some follow up videos with the professors. It could be interesting to hear how developments such as gravitational wave astronomy and just the passage of time may have modified previous statements / answers to your questions.

  • @Jesse__H
    @Jesse__H Před 4 lety +2

    That was a really good explanation of surface tension, that makes a lot of sense.

  • @michaelhollins1556
    @michaelhollins1556 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for that explanation Prof Merrifield.

  • @leodikinis7390
    @leodikinis7390 Před 4 lety

    Always wondered how it works. Great stuff!!

  • @clockworkkirlia7475
    @clockworkkirlia7475 Před 4 lety +2

    Ahaha, brilliant! I'm really getting back into these science education videos now that my own education has hit a bit of a speed bump.

  • @sparhopper
    @sparhopper Před 4 lety +9

    *Brady's reaction:* _"Huh..."_

  • @Pendoza84
    @Pendoza84 Před 4 lety +1

    Seems i am watching this channel for quite so time now. For the first time I notice the professor is turning old! I hope he stays well for a long time. I always love listening to his explanations. It makes it look so easy (until you do the math).

  • @savvapouroullis7927
    @savvapouroullis7927 Před 4 lety +5

    I didn't know it was my birthday today. Thanks for the 60 symbols vid!

  • @SaintJohnVideo
    @SaintJohnVideo Před 4 lety

    Neat topic and followup questions, thank you!

  • @Aaron_K
    @Aaron_K Před 4 lety

    Truly fascinating

  • @jfdomega7938
    @jfdomega7938 Před 4 lety

    Fascinating!

  • @grapy83
    @grapy83 Před 4 lety

    Great presentation and great explanation.

  • @urbaniv
    @urbaniv Před 4 lety +1

    Just yesterday my son asked me about clouds and rains and ping... With almost perfect timing this great video pops up thx

  • @Ritzoid
    @Ritzoid Před 4 lety

    Great video! Very informative

  • @Perun42
    @Perun42 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! As always amazing!

  • @MrEazyE357
    @MrEazyE357 Před 4 lety

    Wow! This was an exceptionally educational video. Well done!

  • @x4fab
    @x4fab Před 4 lety +2

    Great video, thank you! I was just thinking about making a shader for rain, making raindrops different in size for different types of weather would be a very neat little detail :)

  • @allenyordy6700
    @allenyordy6700 Před 4 lety

    Keep them coming please this is my fav channel on youtube more of prof ed copeland please

  • @123amsterdan456
    @123amsterdan456 Před 4 lety

    More Mike Merrifield please!!

  • @attedau6235
    @attedau6235 Před 4 lety

    I almost went to school at Newcastle just to see you. We really appreciate you

  • @abdesakib4424
    @abdesakib4424 Před 4 lety

    I'm amazed by Brady's question. They are so precise

  • @CrepitusRex
    @CrepitusRex Před 4 lety

    Another excellent video. Thank you kind sirs.

  • @forthrightgambitia1032

    Excellent video.

  • @patrickmchargue7122
    @patrickmchargue7122 Před 4 lety

    The raindrop size experiment was great science!

  • @avinotion
    @avinotion Před 4 lety

    Merrifield is by far my favorite physics professor

  • @bellsTheorem1138
    @bellsTheorem1138 Před 4 lety

    It's amazing how you can still learn something new about something as common as raindrops.

  • @BradyBoll
    @BradyBoll Před 4 lety +1

    Veritasium put out a fascinating video on period doubling, the Feigenbaum constant, and the practical effects in real life like population modeling. I couldn't help but think that falling raindrops fit into this phenomenon. If given enough time falling through atmosphere, would we see chaotic droplet splitting/recombining and witness period doubling?

  • @diodata
    @diodata Před 4 lety

    That was fun, thanks. Enjoyed the discussion of the early experiments. But there was some fascinating physics left out, such as how rain drops could collect/merge with other drops as it falls...depends on size (effective cross-section radius) of falling drop and target drop. What would be really cool is to discuss how ice crystals form and grow in cold clouds to generate snow. Much different process than the collision/coalescence process he described. I always enjoy the atmospheric phenomena discussions in Sixty Symbols!

  • @chaoslab
    @chaoslab Před 4 lety

    So cool!

  • @arasharfa
    @arasharfa Před 4 lety

    my favorite youtube channel

  • @Nobe_Oddy
    @Nobe_Oddy Před 4 lety

    That was FASCINATING! I NEVER would have guessed that when raindrops get too big they basically explode from the "rising" air flow!! That's soooooo COOL!!!
    -First time I watch a video = LIKED!
    -First time I liked a video = SUBSCRIBED!!
    I just CANNOT WAIT to explore the rest of your videos!!! Wo0T-W0oT!!

  • @zoozolplexOne
    @zoozolplexOne Před 2 lety

    Awesome !!!

  • @dordokamaisu2966
    @dordokamaisu2966 Před 4 lety

    Mike is the best!!

  • @rtpoe
    @rtpoe Před 4 lety

    That something so commonplace would turn out to be so fascinating!

  • @Xen2288
    @Xen2288 Před 4 lety

    Awesome video! Will we be seeing any more videos with Professor Ed?

  • @Toobula
    @Toobula Před 4 lety

    I want to do an experiment to answer this mystery: Why would video like this have 21 dislikes? The title is clear and it is from a well-known (and terrific) producer. Nobody is here by accident and then got disappointed - I simply don't believe it. We've all seen this effect. My theory is that it is a stochastic result of random clicks on display screen, like the raindrops. That is, there are some number of random clicks on a screen happening all the time. Possibly bots "feeling" for clickable areas. Possibly clumsy people, maybe even disabled people, accidentally clicking or tapping randomly by accident. The result might then be the total number of random clicks divided by the percentage of the area covered by the "dislike" button. Of course, the random clicks would not be evenly spread around the screen. They would tend to be near other controls, near the center, and so forth. Science, we need you!
    Regardless, anyone who watched and then disliked this video, or any other of Brady's videos, is an idiot.

  • @Alienrookie
    @Alienrookie Před 4 lety +1

    It's 4 am (Austria), what am I doing here? Can't stop watching these videos!

  • @AtlasReburdened
    @AtlasReburdened Před 4 lety

    I love that a few droplets from the top of the ballooning drop actually travel upward momentarily after the burst.

  • @brokentombot
    @brokentombot Před 4 lety +5

    You forgot to mention if the common visual image of a raindrop is real or not. I am left to assume that raindrops are spheres and never go into that well down drop shape. I imagine a drop shape comes from when a portion leaves a larger portion and some adhesion occurs so a bit is drawn off slower and the sphere elongates. But does this mean water drops should always end up spherical?

    • @superdau
      @superdau Před 4 lety +4

      The "common" raindrop shape most likely comes from seeing something drip. Just before a drop falls from something wet, it looks "drop shaped". After that you would need special equipment to see the real shape.

    • @Ryuuuuuk
      @Ryuuuuuk Před 4 lety

      Without gravity raindrops should have a spherical form, because then it has the smallest surface area for a given volume.

    • @12tman12
      @12tman12 Před 4 lety

      They are actually flattish at the bottom once they start falling, due to effects of the wind. There's some vids around. Funny thing I see it with my naked eyes living in a 30 story apt in the middle of the building. During a storm, the air that hits the building where I am has nowhere to go but up (as seen when I open the balcony door, and one to the hallway heh). So often the wind speed upwards = the falling speed and I get rain drops floating around the balcony almost perfectly suspended in air. In snowstorms it's often I see nothing but upwards snow if there's a north wind.

  • @leonsmuk4461
    @leonsmuk4461 Před 4 lety +1

    I feel like rain drops in summer that go along with thunderstorms are much bigger than a few millimeters. Rain seems really diverse from my perspective at least, where you can either have a very tiny spray or very big blobs...

  • @oldcowbb
    @oldcowbb Před 4 lety

    thats the best explanation of surface tension

  • @7177YT
    @7177YT Před 4 lety

    brilliant, thank you! (:

  • @sjorsschoenmakers3629
    @sjorsschoenmakers3629 Před 4 lety +1

    Actually rain can form in a different way. The kind of rain that Mike described, where vapor is condensing on little particles, forming small drops, and those can bump into each other forming bigger drops (coalescence), takes many hours or even days to develop any rain. That is the sort of rainy day stuff, where a large cloud deck (stratus) is formed in a weather front for example. When you get a shower from a smaller cloud (cumulus) or a thunderstorm (cumulonimbus), rain develops in a different way. Water vapor condenses into tiny droplets at the base of the cloud and move to higher in the cloud due to convective motion. The temperature drops with the altitude and below about 12 degrees Celsius, ice crystals start forming. Water vapor (100% relative humidity) sublimates on the ice crystals, creating snow. As the ice crystals grow, the relative humidity drops, and therefore the water droplets evaporate and so the humidity stays high. The liquid water droplets "feed" the vapor that then sublimates into ice. When the ice crystals grow big enough they start to fall and get in warmer air at lower altitude where they melt into raindrops. Also on their way down they encounter a lot of droplets so they grow bigger due to coalescence. This process is way quicker and is the reason that a thunderstorm can develop rain in (much) less than an hour.

  • @darkiusdark5452
    @darkiusdark5452 Před 4 lety

    I wish the professor would explain Nature phenomena the way Richard Feynman explained light and matter in his book “QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter”.
    That would be great and mind boggling! Thanks Brady and big thanks to the Professor.

  • @Njald
    @Njald Před 4 lety +1

    The solemn tone of the last segment made me think you were going to till us that Professor Merrifield had passed or something

  • @rewrose2838
    @rewrose2838 Před 4 lety

    Awesome stuff dude.
    Honest question though:
    isn't it the surface being too large that causes the big ballooned raindrops to burst ?
    Similarly, it's the lackluster surface tension of a tiny droplet -shrapnel- that causes it to remain in a stable state and not burst, right?

  • @Gts2pro
    @Gts2pro Před 4 lety

    Excellent, I have subscribed, wonder what I shall learn today !! I am doing my Physics higher education applied sciences 😄

  • @jackshumate7874
    @jackshumate7874 Před 4 lety

    Would love to hear a similar discussion of how interstellar hydrogen and ‘dust’ behave in star formation !

  • @annegallagher8284
    @annegallagher8284 Před 4 lety

    Got a typo here at 1:52/11:40. ... med 0.16 - 0.32 cm ... large 0.14 - 0.36 cm. Just love watching your video.

  • @jaimie00
    @jaimie00 Před 4 lety

    I would love to hear his thoughts on dark lightning (AKA terrestrial gamma-ray flashes, AKA TGFs). There seem to be some complex processes at work to create the gamma rays. I love these videos. I wanted to be a meteorologist when I was a teenager. I chose zoology instead, but I'm still fascinated by meteorology.

  • @garyknight8616
    @garyknight8616 Před 4 lety

    Great explanation. Just missing the brown paper for the diagrams (c.f. numberphile)

  • @61rmd1
    @61rmd1 Před 4 lety

    Nice video. I worked on this topic long time ago; the Marshall-Palmer size distribution is out of time, because of the behaviour of the diagram near to zero. Many other size-distributions came out, I remember the beautiful papers of Ulrich, and many other physicists, in the 80' and 90's. Some multiparameter Gamma-distributions were born, which more or less adapted their shape to experimental data. But the big question which came from the Marshall-Palmer work, was: what's the relationship between Rainfall rate and the size of drops?

  • @poo2uhaha
    @poo2uhaha Před 4 lety

    I loved seeing the professor (no Brady :' ( ) at the university open days! It truly felt like meeting a celebrity of mine.

  • @eliad6543
    @eliad6543 Před 4 lety

    Very cool! Is there a way to measure the sizes of raindrops the way that they come out of the cloud, before the shattering?

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 4 lety

    The quick version of the experiment is to play with the garden hose and put your thumb across the end, point the water up and look at the drops temporarily suspended in front of you. See how big and small they get in the time before hitting the ground.
    This video.., I've been thinking about for ages. Thank you.

  • @bonob0123
    @bonob0123 Před 4 lety

    i always wondered about the speed at which your car is travelling and the number of drops/amount of water which hits your windshield in the rain. I imagine there are difference in stopped , slow, faster relative to the speed of the falling rain, very fast when aerodynamics become significant, size/amount/speed of rain etc etc, some rich discussion there maybe.

  • @marshallemmett3313
    @marshallemmett3313 Před 4 lety

    I'm in Southwest Florida, USA and one thing I've noticed about storms is that the initial rain that falls is much bigger in size than the actual storm.
    It's not very intense with the big droplets, but it seems the individual droplets are bigger at the start of the storm the the main part of the storm.

    • @PelycheeaceRA
      @PelycheeaceRA Před 4 lety

      there are down-drafts at the edge of a thunderstorm. when the surrounding air is moving along with the drop, the air resistance is lower, so drops can grow bigger.

  • @slashusr
    @slashusr Před 4 lety

    I was surprised to hear no mention of the "shot tower" used in days past to manufacture musket balls/round shot. There is a beautiful example of one such in downtown Melbourne, under a dome forming part of a railway station cum shopping mall called Melbourne Central. Basically, it's just a tall tower made of brick from the top of which measured drops of molten lead were allowed to fall to a bed of sand. The height of the tower gave the molten lead time to form a ball and grow sufficiently cool as to retain that shape upon reaching the bottom.

  • @der0hund
    @der0hund Před 4 lety

    Nice video, but what has to be mentioned as I think, is, that without hail there would be no rain. Coalescing clouddrops can only form very tiny droplets. Bigger raindrops were frozen before, and when they melt, they become raindrops. That's where all those interresting phenomena occur. - And sometimes the hailstone has no time to melt before hitting the ground. The story of raindrops is very interresting indeed, and full of wonders (one of which is the rainbow of course).

  • @ClevorBelmont
    @ClevorBelmont Před 4 lety

    The beard really adds an air of regality to Professor Merryfield.

  • @MagicPlants
    @MagicPlants Před 4 lety

    awesome video. how many times were you gonna ask that same question at the end tho? lol

  • @pipertripp
    @pipertripp Před 4 lety

    Very cool. There no such thing as a TLDR; Six Symbols video.

  • @dimatha7
    @dimatha7 Před 4 lety

    I like the cable organization, congrats to the IT

  • @MyYTwatcher
    @MyYTwatcher Před 4 lety +4

    Being a good popularizator is maybe even harder than being a good scientist. Good job, dr Merrifield.

  • @DamianReloaded
    @DamianReloaded Před 4 lety

    I guess there being wind would change things a bit. Also the atmospheric pressure. Like hail that forms in an upwards current until the wind can't hold it in the air anymore and then it falls down. Would a less dense atmosphere, or a lesser gravity, imply larger raindrops, or even streams of water?

  • @dsonawan
    @dsonawan Před 4 lety

    At 4:02, Professor Mike Merrifield says speck of dust will start the condensation. However, once condensed into water droplet, why don't all the water droplets become ice. It is really cold up there. Some articles state that the liquid is in supercooled state and hence in a liquid state and not frozen into ice. But if the condensation was first triggered by an impurity like speck of dust, then the liquid should not be in supercooled state. I have searched many articles and some are honest answers saying we really don't know how rain is formed

  • @krzysztofsoja5301
    @krzysztofsoja5301 Před 4 lety

    OK, Professor Mike Merrifield, You mentioned raindrops formation in updrafts, but what's happening with them when they get into a strong downdraft? That is an interesting case, istn't it? I suppose they can combine into huge ones due to downdraft lowering raindrops relative speed to the air.

  • @BushidoKudo
    @BushidoKudo Před 4 lety +13

    How did he isolate the snowflakes?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 4 lety +1

      Seems easier than raindrops, provided snow, cold and an outdoors microscope: they are solid after all for as long as they remain frozen. He was probably very careful in any case, maybe he used the tray trick without the flour to collect only a few or whatever. I'm sure there are many stories online about his feat.

  • @annegallagher8284
    @annegallagher8284 Před 4 lety

    In Australia we watch the government seeding our sky. Our raindrops are warm but huge and preceded by hailstones in mid summer. Thanks for info in this channel.

  • @WilliamDye-willdye
    @WilliamDye-willdye Před 4 lety

    A friend from north India said Monsoon raindrops can be extraordinarily large sometimes, causing pain if you were hit by them. I wonder if those raindrops formed at just the right altitude to hit the ground right before they would've split apart.

  • @shannonchuprevich3021
    @shannonchuprevich3021 Před 4 lety

    I think there may be a bit more happening when the droplets first form as spheres. Nature's not really choosing the shape it's reacting. Quantum gravity could be an occurrence of an outter pressure, if space was considered an object. This is a very good topic btw. One that highlights the entropy of a molecules, from quantum gravity(the energy stored from the sun) to the point of our general understanding of gravity kicking in.

  • @SteveGouldinSpain
    @SteveGouldinSpain Před 4 lety

    Anecdotal evidence I know but I was in a summer storm in Spain twenty years ago and the rain came down like golf balls. It was a very hot day and about two hours afterwards it was so dry you would not have thought it had rained at all! I just remember seeing how big the raindrops were and the splat they made when hitting the pavement.

  • @perfumedmanatee6235
    @perfumedmanatee6235 Před 4 lety

    Yay!

  • @drahunter213
    @drahunter213 Před 4 lety

    7:50
    You can do that yourself the easy way for me was keeping a mouth full of water then while at a great hight just open your mouth towards the ground and the water in your mouth will fall and there’s a high chance a single large water droplet will be present with a bunch of smaller ones around it but halfway down the large droplet will be whole but it’ll explode in midair creating lots of other droplets then it hits the ground lol I found that out and how water works like that when I was a teen lol thought it was cool because I never seen a droplet explode in midair like that

  • @NoHandleToSpeakOf
    @NoHandleToSpeakOf Před 4 lety +1

    How long does it take for a raindrop to fall? What is it's maximum velocity? How much kinetic energy is there in a drop?

  • @peterway9376
    @peterway9376 Před 4 lety

    In a large storm there can be an enormous amount of up-draft. It is this up-draft that is responsible for hail stones growing to large size. Surely then it can have an effect on rain drop size.

  • @GravisTKD
    @GravisTKD Před 4 lety +7

    He could have saved himself some time by just asking Forrest Gump. He's had more than enough experience to provide some insight :)

  • @zray2937
    @zray2937 Před 4 lety

    Brady's questions where quite on spot in this video.

  • @boboften9952
    @boboften9952 Před 3 lety

    There Is A Quote From Peter Brock An Australian Race Car Driver Who As A Kid Would Driver His Car At 55 Mph To Defeat / Deflect Rain Off The Front Window Screen Of The Car He Was Driving Because The Rain Was Hitting The Window Screen Faster Than What The Basic Window Wipers Would Move .
    Effectively He Was Driving Blindly Until He Reached 55 Mph . ( 55 Mph = 88.5 Kph )

  • @artistphilb
    @artistphilb Před 4 lety

    I would imagine that the downdraft that often occurs at a storm front might prevent the large drops from experiencing a ballooning effect, hence large heavy raindrops?

  • @launch4
    @launch4 Před 4 lety +1

    So if large raindrops go kaboom on the way down, how do we occasionally get downpours where the individual drops are huge?