Dictionary Definition
foggy adj
2 stunned or confused and slow to react (as from
blows or drunkenness or exhaustion) [syn: dazed, groggy, logy, stuporous]
3 indistinct or hazy in outline; "a landscape of
blurred outlines"; "the trees were just blurry shapes" [syn:
bleary, blurred, blurry, fuzzy, hazy, muzzy]
4 obscured by fog; "he could barely see through
the fogged window" [syn: fogged] [also: foggiest, foggier]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɒɡi
Derived terms
Translations
obscured by mist or fog
Extensive Definition
Fog is a cloud in contact with the ground.
Fog differs from other clouds only in that fog touches the surface
of the Earth. The same cloud that is not fog on lower ground may be
fog where it contacts higher ground such as hilltops or mountain
ridges. Fog is distinct from mist only in its density. Fog is
defined as cloud which reduces visibility to less than 1
km, whereas mist is
that which reduces visibility to less than 2 km.
The foggiest place in the world is the Grand Banks
off the island of Newfoundland,
Canada. Fog
is frequent there as the Grand Banks is the meeting place of the
cold Labrador
Current from the north and the much warmer Gulf Stream
from the south. The foggiest land areas in the world are Point Reyes,
California, and
Argentia, Newfoundland
and Labrador, both with over 200 foggy days a year.
Characteristics
Fog can form when the difference between temperature and dewpoint is (5 °F) 3 °C, or less.Fog begins to form when water vapor
(a colorless gas) condenses into tiny liquid
water droplets in the air. Conversely, water vapor is formed by the
evaporation of
liquid water or by the sublimation
of ice. Since water vapor is colorless, it is actually the small
liquid water droplets that are condensed from it that make water
suspended in the atmosphere visible in the form of fog or any other
type of cloud.
Fog normally occurs at a relative
humidity near 100%. This can be achieved by either adding
moisture to the air or dropping the ambient air temperature. Fog
can form at lower humidities, and fog can sometimes not form with
relative humidity at 100%. A reading of 100% relative humidity
means that the air can hold no additional moisture and the air will
then become supersaturated if
additional moisture is added.
Fog formation does require all of the elements
that normal cloud formation requires with the most important being
condensation
nuclei. When the air is saturated, additional moisture tends to
condense rather than staying in the air as vapor. Condensation
nuclei must be present in the form of dust, aeresols, pollutants,
etc. for the water to condense upon. When there are exceptional
amounts of condensation nuclei present, especially hydroscopic (water seeking
such as salt, see below) then the water vapor may condense below
100% relative humidity.
Fog can form suddenly, and can dissipate just as
rapidly, depending what side of the dewpoint the temperature is on.
This phenomenon is known as flash fog.
Another type of formation also common is
associated with sea fog. This is due to the peculiar effect of
salt. Clouds of all types
require minute hygroscopic
particles upon which water vapor can condense. Over the ocean
surface, the most common particles are salt from salt spray
produced by breaking waves. Except in areas of storminess, the most
common areas of breaking waves are located near coastlines, hence
the greatest densities of airborne salt particles are there.
Condensation on salt particles has been observed to occur at
humidities as low as 70%, thus fog can occur even in relatively dry
air in suitable locations such as the California coast. Typically,
such lower humidity fog is preceded by a transparent mistiness
along the coastline as condensation competes with evaporation, a
phenomenon that is typically noticeable by beachgoers in the
afternoon. Another recently-discovered source of condensation
nuclei for coastal fog is kelp. Researchers have found that under
stress (intense sunlight, strong evaporation, etc.), kelp release
particles of iodine which in turn become nuclei for condensation of
water vapor.
Fog occasionally produces precipitation
in the form of drizzle
or very light snow. Drizzle occurs when the humidity of fog attains
100% and the minute cloud droplets begin to coalesce into larger
droplets. This can occur when the fog layer is lifted and cooled
sufficiently, or when it is forcibly compressed from above. Drizzle
becomes freezing drizzle when the temperature at the surface drops
below the freezing point.
The thickness of fog is largely determined by the
altitude of the inversion boundary, which in coastal or oceanic
locales is also the top of the marine layer, above which the
airmass is warmer and drier. The inversion boundary varies its
altitude primarily in response to the weight of the air above it
which is measured in terms of atmospheric pressure. The marine
layer and any fogbank it may contain will be "squashed" when the
pressure is high, and conversely, may expand upwards when the
pressure above it is lowering.
Fog as a visibility hazard
Fog reduces visibility and thus contributes to accidents, particularly with modes of transportation. Ships, trains, cars and planes cannot see each other and collide. Notable examples of accidents due to fog include the July 28, 1945 crash of a B-25 Mitchell into the Empire State Building, and the July 25, 1956 collision of the ocean liners the and . Although most sea vessels can penetrate fog using radar, road vehicles have to travel slowly and use low-beam headlights. Localised fog is especially dangerous, as drivers can be caught by surprise. On busy highways, multiple-vehicle collisions have resulted.The worst accident in aviation history occurred
in the fog when 2 Boeing 747s collided in 1977 in Tenerife.
One 747 had clearance to taxi down a foggy runway and the other
could not see any distance down the runway when the captain decided
to take off without proper clearance.
At airports, some attempts have been made to
develop methods (such as using heating or spraying salt particles)
to aid fog dispersal. These methods enjoy some success at
temperatures below freezing.
Types
Fog can form in a number of ways, depending on how the cooling that caused the condensation occurred:Radiation fog is formed by the cooling of land
after sunset by thermal
radiation in calm conditions with clear sky. The cool ground produces
condensation in the
nearby air by heat
conduction. In perfect calm the fog layer can be less than a
meter deep but turbulence can promote a
thicker layer. Radiation fogs occur at night, and usually does not
last long after sunrise.
Radiation fog is common in autumn, and early winter. Examples of this
phenomenon include the Tule fog.
Ground fog is fog that obscures less than 60% of
the sky and does not extend to the base of any overhead clouds.
However, the term is sometimes used to refer to radiation
fog.
Advection fog occurs when moist air passes over a
cool surface by advection (wind) and is cooled. It is common
as a warm
front passes over an area with significant snowpack. It's most common at
sea when tropical air encounters cooler
waters, including areas of
cold water upwelling,
such as along the California
coast. The advection of fog along the California coastline is
propelled onto land by one of several processes. A cold front can
push the marine layer coastward, an occurrence most typical in the
spring or late fall. During the summer months, a low pressure
trough produced by intense heating inland creates a strong pressure
gradient, drawing in the dense marine layer. Also during the
summer, strong high pressure aloft over the desert southwest,
usually in connection with the summer monsoon, produces a south to
southeasterly flow which can drive the offshore marine layer up the
coastline; a phenomenon known as a "southerly surge", typically
following a coastal heat spell. However, if the monsoonal flow is
sufficiently turbulent, it might instead break up the marine layer
and any fog it may contain. Moderate turbulence will typically
transform a fog bank, lifting it and breaking it up into shallow
convective clouds called stratocumulus.
Steam fog, also called evaporation fog, is the
most localized form and is created by cold air passing over much
warmer water or moist land. It often causes freezing fog, or
sometimes hoar
frost.
Precipitation fog (or frontal fog) forms as
precipitation
falls into drier air below the cloud, the liquid droplets evaporate into water vapor.
The water vapor cools and at the dewpoint it condenses and fog
forms.
Upslope fog forms when winds blow air up a
slope (called orographic
lift), adiabatical
cooling it as it rises, and causing the moisture in it to
condense. This often causes freezing fog on mountaintops, where the
cloud
ceiling would not otherwise be low enough.
Valley fog forms in mountain valleys, often during winter. It
is the result of a temperature
inversion caused by heavier cold air settling into in a valley,
with warmer air passing over the mountains above. It is essentially
radiation fog confined by local topography, and can last for
several days in calm conditions. In California's
Central Valley, Valley fog is often referred to as Tule fog. Ice
fog is any kind of fog where the droplets have frozen into extremely tiny
crystals of ice in midair. Generally this
requires temperatures at or below
−35 °C (−30 °F), making it common only in and
near the Arctic and Antarctic
regions. It is most often seen in urban areas where it is created
by the freezing of water vapor present in automobile exhaust and
combustion -products from heating and power generation. Urban ice
fog can become extremely dense and will persist day and night until
the temperature rises. Extremely small amounts of ice fog falling
from the sky form a type of precipitation
called ice
crystals, often reported in Barrow,
Alaska. Ice fog often leads to the visual phenomenon of
light
pillars.
Freezing fog occurs when liquid fog droplets
freeze to surfaces, forming white rime ice. This
is very common on mountain tops which are exposed
to low clouds. It is equivalent to freezing
rain, and essentially the same as the ice that forms inside a
freezer which is not of
the "frostless" or "frost-free" type. In some areas such as in the
State of Oregon, the term "freezing fog" refers to fog where water
vapor is super-cooled filling the air with small ice crystals
similar to very light snow. It seems to make the fog "tangible", as
if one could "grab a handful".
Artificial fog is artificially generated fog that
is usually created by vaporizing a water and glycol-based or glycerine-based fluid. The
fluid is injected into a heated block, and evaporates quickly. The
resulting pressure forces the vapor out of the exit. Upon coming
into contact with cool outside air the vapor forms a
fog—see fog
machine.
Garua fog is a type of fog which happens to occur
near the western coast of Chile. The normal fog produced by the sea
travels inland, but suddenly meets an area of hot air. This causes
the water particles of fog to shrink by evaporation, producing a
transparent mist. Garua fog is nearly invisible, yet it still
forces drivers to use windshield wipers.
Hail fog sometimes occurs in the vicinity of
significant hail
accumulations due to decreased temperature and increased moisture
leading to saturation in a very shallow layer near the surface. It
most often occurs when there is a warm, humid layer atop the hail
and when wind is light. This ground fog tends to be localized but
can be extremely dense and abrupt. It may form shortly after the
hail falls; when the hail has had time to cool the air and as it
absorbs
heat when melting
and evaporating.
Fog shadows
These fascinating shadows look odd since humans are not used to seeing shadows in three dimensions. The thin fog is just dense enough to be illuminated by the light that passes through the gaps in a structure or in a tree. As a result, the path of an object shadow through the "fog" appears darkened. In a sense, these shadow lanes are similar to crepuscular rays, which are caused by cloud shadows, but here, they are caused by the shadows of solid objects.Samples of fog shadows of different objects:
See also
- Great Smog of 1952
- "Pea soup" fog. Fog found in British cities that have factories that burn soft coal.
- Thank You, Fog: last poems by W. H. Auden
- List of rail accidents
- Autoland
- Automotive lighting
- Foglamp
- Black ice
- Haboob
- Mist
- Pogonip (weather)
- Smog
- Tule fog
- Camanchacas
- FIDO
- Fogging (photography)
- Anti-fog
- Runway visual range
- Transmissometer
- Visibility
- Whiteout (weather)
References
- Maria K. Filonczuk, Daniel R. Cayan, Laurence G. Riddle, Variability of marine fog along the California coast, SIO-Reference, No 95-2, Climate Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, July 1995.
External links
- What is the difference between ice fog and freezing fog?
- United States' current dense fog advisories from NOAA
- Current Western US fog satellite pictures from NOAA
- Lake Ontario Evaporative-Steam Fog Video
- Social & Economic Costs of Fog from "NOAA Socioeconomics" website initiative
foggy in Asturian: Borrina
foggy in Bosnian: Magla
foggy in Bulgarian: Мъгла
foggy in Catalan: Boira
foggy in Czech: Mlha
foggy in Danish: Tåge
foggy in German: Nebel
foggy in Estonian: Udu
foggy in Modern Greek (1453-): Ομίχλη
foggy in Spanish: Niebla
foggy in Esperanto: Nebulo
foggy in Basque: Laino
foggy in French: Brouillard
foggy in Friulian: Fumate
foggy in Korean: 안개
foggy in Croatian: Magla
foggy in Indonesian: Kabut
foggy in Icelandic: Þoka
foggy in Italian: Nebbia
foggy in Hebrew: ערפל
foggy in Georgian: ნისლი
foggy in Latin: Nebula (meteorologia)
foggy in Lithuanian: Rūkas
foggy in Hungarian: Köd
foggy in Malay (macrolanguage): Kabut
foggy in Dutch: Mist
foggy in Japanese: 霧
foggy in Norwegian: Tåke
foggy in Norwegian Nynorsk: Tåke
foggy in Occitan (post 1500): Nèbla
foggy in Polish: Mgła
foggy in Portuguese: Neblina
foggy in Romanian: Ceaţă
foggy in Russian: Туман
foggy in Sicilian: Negghia (finòminu
meteorològgicu)
foggy in Simple English: Fog
foggy in Slovak: Hmla
foggy in Slovenian: Megla
foggy in Serbian: Магла
foggy in Serbo-Croatian: Magla
foggy in Finnish: Sumu
foggy in Swedish: Dimma
foggy in Vietnamese: Sương mù
foggy in Ukrainian: Туман
foggy in Venetian: Nebia
foggy in Contenese: 霧
foggy in Samogitian: Rūks
foggy in Chinese: 霧
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
addlebrained, addled, addleheaded, addlepated, aleatoric, aleatory, amorphous, beclouded, befuddled, blear, blear-witted, bleared, bleary, blind, blobby, blurred, blurry, broad, chance, chancy, chaotic, clear as mud, cloudy, confused, dark, dim, disordered, dizzy, faint, feeble, filmy, fogged, fuddlebrained, fuddled, fuzzy, general, half-seen,
half-visible, hazy,
hit-or-miss, ill-defined, imprecise, in a fog, in a
muddle, inaccurate,
inchoate, incoherent, inconspicuous, indecisive, indefinable, indefinite, indeterminable, indeterminate, indistinct, indistinguishable,
inexact, lax, loose, low-profile, merely
glimpsed, misted,
misty, muddled, muddleheaded, muddy, muddybrained, murky, mushy, muzzy, nebulous, nonspecific, obscure, opaque, orderless, out of focus,
pale, pea-soupy, puzzleheaded, random, scramblebrained,
semivisible,
shadowed forth, shadowy,
shapeless, smoggy, soupy, stochastic, sweeping, transcendent, uncertain, unclear, undefined, undestined, undetermined, unplain, unrecognizable, unspecified, vague, vaporous, vapory, veiled, weak