Airborne Bacteria Make It Rain, Researchers Find — It’s always something weird that changes everything.
The fact that bacteria could cause snow and rain was discovered almost by accident in the 1970s by study co-author David Sands, a Montana State University plant pathologist, during his research on Pseudomonas syringae, a microbe that causes ice to form on leaves.
Unable to discover the source of repeatedly infected fields, Sands exasperatedly took to the skies. He did the scientific equivalent of dragging a cup through the clouds — and lo and behold, there was P. syringae.
P. syringae is not the only biological ice nucleator, but it is the most common, and all varieties share a protein structure that provides a scaffold for free-floating water molecules. Once bound to the bacteria and to each other, the water vapors are able to freeze, and eventually fall back to Earth.
In a pure state, water vapors freeze at temperatures below -35 degrees Celsius. Nucleators allow this to happen in warmer conditions, and Christner’s study found that bacteria are the most common warm-temperature nucleators of all.
Researchers never realized bacteria could be so widespread in the clouds, said Christner, because the technologies used to measure fine dust — traditionally seen as the most important nucleator — ignore microbe-sized particles.
“It’s not that these atmospheric scientists are idiots — they’re not,” he said. “But biological nucleators were not previously recognized as being that abundant or important. They’re going to have to revise that.”
Two miles long, and designed so that your connecting flight is always on the opposite end of the terminal.
^^^ Ooops… wrong thread… meant for the airport thing.
It always rains when the leave get dusty. That’s a fact of life.
Everytime a Central Park butterfly sneezes, a typhoon forms two months later over Tokyo.
I thought China was responsible….
Yea, I saw this story on Wired. And the first too things I thought about were Ulcers and that I had just been out taking pictures of clouds.
Ulcers because we found that bacteria was the prominant cause of that dysfunction, and maybe there is a similar thing hapening with the weather.
Well you can see why I was thinking about taking pictures of clouds.
eh, misspellings and no img tags
http://takeit2.com/dl/dsc08449_800.jpg