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  2. Weather lore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_lore

    Rain before seven, clear by eleven. Late-night rains and early morning rains may simply be the last precipitation of a passing weather front. However, since fronts pass at night as often as they do in the day, morning rain is no predictor of a dry afternoon. However, this lore can describe non-frontal weather.

  3. Inversion (meteorology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversion_(meteorology)

    Inversion-created smog in Nowa Ruda, Poland, 2017 Temperature inversion phenomenon in the early morning near Tawau, Sabah, Malaysia where smoke that was emitted from an oil palm mill stayed close to the ground. The wind carried the smoke in the direction of the nearby settlement to the middle-right of the photo (August 2023).

  4. San Francisco fog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_fog

    Lower fog levels are also problematic for the agricultural regions fog patterns support, such as the Napa and Salinas Valleys. [14] Not only has the fog season shortened, lasting from June to September instead of from May to October, but the hours per day there is fog has shortened by about three hours.

  5. Fog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog

    Fog is a visible aerosol consisting of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air at or near the Earth's surface. [1] [2] Fog can be considered a type of low-lying cloud usually resembling stratus and is heavily influenced by nearby bodies of water, topography, and wind conditions.

  6. Humidity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humidity

    Likewise, warming air decreases the relative humidity. Warming some air containing a fog may cause that fog to evaporate, as the droplets are prone to total evaporation due to the lowering partial pressure of water vapour in that air, as the temperature rises. Relative humidity only considers the invisible water vapour.

  7. Fog desert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog_desert

    Another way fog forms in deserts occurs when a desert is close to an ocean which has a cold current. When air is heated over desert land and blows towards the cool water in the ocean, it condenses and fog is formed. The cool fog is then blown inland by the ocean breeze. Fog is mainly formed in the early morning or after sunset. [5]

  8. Tule fog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tule_fog

    Tule fog is a radiation fog, which condenses when there is a high relative humidity (typically after a heavy rain), calm winds, and rapid cooling during the night. The nights are longer in the winter months, which allows an extended period of ground cooling, and thereby a pronounced temperature inversion at a low altitude.

  9. June Gloom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/June_Gloom

    The foothill regions of these mountains experience some of the thickest fog and drizzle, as they are essentially in the clouds at this point. [1] The marine layer clouds of a June Gloom day usually are at their maximum at dawn, when the surface air is at a minimum temperature and the temperature difference in the inversion layer is at its maximum.