Dew
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Image:Dew on a Equisetum fluviatile Luc Viatour.jpg Fresh morning dew on a Horsetail |
Image:Morning Dew.jpg Fresh morning dew glistening in the sun |
Image:Dew 11 bg 060103.jpg Some dew on a wildflower in Sequoia National Park |
Image:Water drops on spider web.jpg Dew on a spider web |
Image:Dew on grass closeup.jpg Dew on grass |
Image:DirkvdM spider dew.jpg A spider in a dew-covered web near Orosí, Costa Rica. |
Dew is water in the form of droplets that appears on thin, exposed objects in the morning or evening. As the exposed surface cools by radiating its heat, atmospheric moisture condenses at a rate greater than that of which it can evaporate, resulting in the formation of water droplets.
When temperatures are low enough, dew takes the form of ice; this form is called frost.
Because dew is related to the temperature of surfaces, in late summer it is formed most easily on surfaces which are not warmed by conducted heat from deep ground, such as: grass, leaves, railings, car roofs, and bridges.
Dew should not be confused with Guttation, which is the process by which plants release excess water from the tips of their leaves.
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[edit] Formation
Whether or not water vapor will condense into droplets depends on the temperature. The temperature at which droplets can form is called the Dew Point. When surface temperature drops, eventually reaching the dew point, atmospheric water vapor condenses to form small droplets on the surface. This process distinguishes dew from those hydrometeors (meteorological occurrences of water) which are formed directly in air cooling to its dew point (typically around condensation nuclei) such as fog or clouds. The thermodynamic principles of formation, however, are virtually the same.
[edit] Occurrence
Sufficient cooling of the surface typically takes place when it loses more energy by infrared radiation than it receives as solar radiation from the sun, which is especially the case on clear nights. As another important point, poor thermal conductivity restricts the replacement of such losses from deeper ground layers which are typically warmer at night.
The principles of dew formation do not strictly constrict its occurrence to the night and the outdoors. They are also working when eyeglasses get steamy in a warm, wet room or in industrial processes. However, the term condensation is preferred in these cases.
[edit] Measurement
A classical device for dew measurement is the drosometer. A small, artificial condenser surface is suspended from an arm attached to a pointer or a pen that records the weight changes of the condenser on a drum. Besides being very wind sensitive, however, this, like all artificial surface devices, only provides a measure of the meteorological potential for dew formation. The actual amount of dew in a specific place is strongly dependent on surface properties. For its measurement, plants, leaves, or whole soil columns are placed on a balance with their surface at the same height and in the same surroundings as would occur naturally, thus providing a small lysimeter. Further methods include estimation by means of comparing the droplets to standardized photographs, or volumetric measurement of the amount of water wiped from the surface. It has to be kept in mind that some of these methods include guttation, while others only measure dewfall and/or distillation.
[edit] Significance
Due to its dependence on radiation balance, dew amounts can reach a theoretical maximum of about 0.8 mm per night, measured values, however, rarely exceeding 0.5 mm. In most climates of the world, the annual average is too small to compete with rain. In regions with considerable dry seasons, adapted plants like lichen or pine seedlings, benefit from dew. Large-scale, natural irrigation without rainfall, such as in the Atacama Desert and Namib desert, however, is mostly attributed to fog water.
Another effect of dew on plants is its role as a habitat for pathogens such as the fungus Phytophthora infestans which infects potato plants.
In Greek mythology, Ersa is the goddess of dew.
[edit] Artificial harvesting
Several man-made devices such as antique, big stone piles in the Ukraine, medieval "dew ponds" in southern England, or volcanic stone covers on the fields of Lanzarote have been thought to be dew-catching devices, but could be shown to work on other principles. At present, the International Organization for Dew Utilization is working on effective, foil-based condensers for regions where rain or fog cannot cover water needs throughout the year. An interesting strategy for harvesting dew on large scale for drinking water was proposed in 1980.[1]
Large scale dew harveting systems have been made by Indian Institute of Mangement, Ahmedabad, India [IIMA] at coastal semi arid region Kutch [western India]. These condensers can harvest more than 200 litres (on average)of dew water per night for about 90 nights in dew season [October-May.The research lab of IIMA at Kutch has successfully proven that dew can be supplementary source of water in coastal arid areas.
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] External links
- OPUR (International Organisation for Dew Utilization)
- International Conference on Fog, Fog Collection and Dew
- A large scale dew collection as a source for water supplyca:Rosada
cs:Rosa da:Dug (vand) de:Tau (Niederschlag) et:Kaste (meteoroloogia) el:Δρόσος es:Rocío (fenómeno físico) eo:Roso eu:Ihintz fr:Rosée id:Embun it:Rugiada he:טל nl:Dauw ja:露 no:Dugg nn:Dogg oc:Rosada pl:Rosa pt:Sereno qu:Shulla ru:Роса sco:Dyow sl:Rosa fi:Kaste (sääilmiö) sv:Dagg vi:Sương zh:露水

