From Deseret News archives:
Pollution may reduce snowfall east of S.L.
Don A. Griffith, president of North American Weather Consultants in Sandy, thinks winter snowfall in the mountains east of the Salt Lake City-Provo urban complex may be decreasing because of pollution. His 2005 study, "Is Air Pollution Impacting Winter Orographic Precipitation in Utah?" was published in the Journal of Weather Modification last year.
Griffith's company is involved in weather modification efforts to increase precipitation, so they have an interest in finding out if any human-caused factor other than their own efforts are influencing the weather.
The study, co-authored by the company's Mark E. Solak and David P. Yorty, examined weather record stretching back to 1949 and 1956, and found a surprising trend. In mountains to the east of Salt Lake City and Provo, snowfall has been decreasing.
Meanwhile, for the same period, November-March, that didn't happen in Salt Lake City. An explanation is that snow would begin falling on Salt Lake City as weather drifted in from the west, the flakes falling before weather systems absorbed pollution. In fact, snow seems to have increased slightly in Utah's largest city.
The theory is microscopic particles, possibly from diesel exhaust, "might serve as additional cloud condensation nuclei," Griffith said in a telephone interview. These nuclei are the grains upon which cloud water droplets condense.
If enough tiny particles are in the cloud, "you may produce more but smaller cloud droplets," he said.
Precipitation is produced through a mechanism called collision coalescence, he said. Tiny cloud droplets collide, forming larger ones. When they are massive enough, they precipitate out and rain or snow falls.
As snowflakes drift through polluted air, they may not collect these droplets as effectively as they would in an unpolluted environment, he said. They may not be as efficient in collecting smaller droplets that formed around microscopic particles.
The long-term trend looks "pretty dramatic," he said. Downwind of Salt Lake City and Provo, winter precipitation seems to have declined over the past 60 years or so.
Would the snow precipitate somewhere farther away from the city? The team could not find evidence of that, when they studied weather records for Heber City. "It looks like the negative effects, whatever they're being caused by" may extend to the western Uinta Mountains, he said.
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