Weather Facts
Posted by: Deepak Kumar
1. The fastest speed a falling raindrop
can hit you is 18mph.
2. during a hurricane, 90% of the people
who die end up dying from drowning.
3. The coldest temperature ever recorded
was a negative 126.9 degrees Fahrenheit in Vostok Station, Antarctica.
4. Between evaporation and falling as
precipitation, a droplet of water may travel thousands of miles.
5. The typical lifetime of a small cumulus
cloud is between 10 to 15 minutes.
6. A corn field of one acre gives of
4,000 gallons of water per day in evaporation.
7. A molecule of water will stay in
Earth’s atmosphere for an average duration of 10-12 days.
8. Snowflakes falling at 2-4 mph can take
about 1 hr. to reach the ground.
9. For each minute of the day, 1 billion
tons of rain falls on the Earth.
10. At any given time, on average there
are about 1800 thunderstorms occurring on earth with 100 lightning strikes per
second.
11. Lightning bolts can travel 60 miles.
12. A lightning bolt travels at about
14,000mph and brings 300,000 volts of electricity to the ground.
13. The air located around a lightning
bolt is heated to around 30,000 degrees Celsius. This is 5 times hotter than
the surface of the sun.
14. The chances of being struck by
lightning is about one in three million.
15. The largest hailstone ever recorded
in the United States was nearly the size of a soccer ball. It was a 7-inch wide
chunk of ice.
16. Lightning sets about 10,000 forest fires
every year in the United States.
17. In one day a hurricane can release
enough energy to supply all of the nation’s electrical needs for about six
months.
18. The highest temperature ever recorded
in the United States was 134 degrees F at Greenland Ranch in Death Valley,
California.
19. In 1899, it was so cold that the
Mississippi River froze over its entire length.
20. The United States uses an estimated
10 million tons of salt each year to melt ice on the roads.
21. A cubic mile of ordinary fog contains
less than a gallon of water.
22. An inch of rain water is equivalent
to 15 inches of dry, powdery snow.
23. Every year in the US, 625 people are
struck by lightning.
24.
The average width of a tornado’s funnel averages about 100 to 200 yards but may
be as wide as a mile.