An inch is a unit of distance, not a specific amount. Therefore, 3 inches is always equal to 3 inches.
False; the "or" is an additive property so the probability of rain or snow muse be greater than or equal to 0.65.
one
The water equivalent of snow varies, but as a general rule, 20 centimetres of freshly fallen snow is equivalent to 2 cm of rain. If the snow has been lying around for a while then its density will increase.
Easy for rain and snow to slide off.
The chances that it will rain or snow at a given time.
It can vary a lot - a common figure would be about half an inch of rain, but you could have an inch of water with very wet snow.
49 inches of snow is 4 feet 1 inch. 5 inches of very wet snow is equal to 1 inch of rain, and 15 inches of dry powder snow is equal to 1 inch of rain, so the average snowfall is equal to 10 inches equals 1 inch of rain. So 49 inches of snow would be equal to about 5 inches of rain.
That would be snow.
The fluffiness of the snow can vary how deep it is compared to an inch of rain. On average, however, ten inches of snow is an inch of rain, so .04 inches of rain is similar to .4 inches of snow.
This will depend on how cold it is, but on average 10 inches of snow = 1 inch of rain, so 0.15 inches of rain = 1.5 inches of snow. It could be less than in inch of wet snow, or more than 2 inches of powder, however.
the correct answer is snow
Your answer is snow
it gets both equal rain and snow
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
7
30
About 37.03 inches of rain per year.