The yearly precipitation rate is between 20 and 60 inches in the form of rain or snow.
The stronger the temperature decrease with height, the deeper the clouds get, and the greater the precipitation rate becomes.
These changes can reflect as cooling, warming, higher precipitation rates and many others.
Targets small enough to obey the Rayleigh scattering, resulting in the return being proportional to the precipitation rate.
This term is associated with storms having high precipitation rates.
This is used with weather radar to measure radial wind velocity and precipitation rate in each different volume of air.
In some countries, the evaporation rate far exceeds the precipitation rate.
All the months have temperature averages below 10 C. Above 2000 meters the precipitation rate starts to decrease.
The precipitation rates in the middle of the province are much more moderate.
Kevin Trenberth thought climate change as a contributing factor in the unusually high precipitation rates.