enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ice dam (roof) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_dam_(roof)

    Ice dam forming on slate roof. An ice dam is an ice build-up on the eaves of sloped roofs of heated buildings that results from melting snow under a snow pack reaching the eave and freezing there. Freezing at the eave impedes the drainage of meltwater, which adds to the ice dam and causes backup of the meltwater, which may cause water leakage ...

  3. Ice spike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_spike

    Spikes that grow from a crystallite formed below the surface of the water may project from the ice sheet at a steep angle, rather than perpendicular to it. [5] The ice spike process is rare - more commonly the surface freezes over entirely, and as water under the surface freezes it pushes all of the surface ice upward.

  4. Ice circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_circle

    Ice circles tend to rotate even when they form in water that is not moving. The ice circle lowers the temperature of the water around it, which causes the water to become denser than the slightly warmer water around it. The dense water then sinks and creates its own circular motion, causing the ice circle to rotate. [10]

  5. 'Mysterious' chunks of ice crash through roof of home - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2015/01/09/mysterious-chunks...

    A mysterious massive chunk of ice seems to have fallen from the sky, leaving a nice sized hole in one man?s ceiling.

  6. Ice jacking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_jacking

    Ice jacking is a continuous process that occurs during the winter in areas near lakes. The process starts when the ice begins to crack. When water then fills in those gaps, the process repeats and continues until there is a wall of ice surrounding the lake's shoreline, sometimes reaching up to three feet.

  7. Frost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frost

    Window frost (also called fern frost or ice flowers) forms when a glass pane is exposed to very cold air on the outside and warmer, moderately moist air on the inside. If the pane is a bad insulator (for example, if it is a single-pane window), water vapour condenses on the glass, forming frost patterns.

  8. Bioprecipitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioprecipitation

    Bioprecipitation is the concept of rain-making bacteria and was proposed by David Sands from Montana State University in the 1970s. [1] This is precipitation that is beneficial for microbial and plant growth, it is a feedback cycle beginning with land plants generating small air-borne particles called aerosols that contain microorganisms that influence the formation of clouds by their ice ...

  9. Fuligo septica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuligo_septica

    Fuligo septica contains a yellow pigment called fuligorubin A that is thought to be involved in photoreception and in the process of energy conversion during its life cycle. [16] In 2011, a Japanese research group reported isolating and characterizing a new chlorine -containing yellow pigment from a specific strain of the organism that they ...