art of snowmaking - Skiing Wisconsin

Transcription

art of snowmaking - Skiing Wisconsin
Snowmaking
Made
Simple
A summary of the
ART OF SNOWMAKING
Just for FUN, take the “Do you know?” quiz!
Skiing Wisconsin
www.skiingwisconsin.com
Ski Areas Can Make Snow… But
Nature Does it Best
The Nature-made Snowflake
Snow is precipitation in the form of crystalline water-ice. Snowflakes form when tiny
super cooled droplets freeze as a few of the molecules connect in hexagonal prisms.
The freezing process is helped by dust and other biological particles in the air which
“Nucleate” the process allowing the freezing to take place at a higher temperature.
Sometimes, instead of a flake, snow will fall in the form of a small “bee-bee” due to
melting and re-freezing. This type of snow is called “Graupel”, “Ice Pellets” or “Snow
Grains”. It is still snow and on the ski hill is just as much fun.
Snow forms in the clouds well above the earth’s surface. Temperatures are lower there
which is why it can snow while the temperature in your yard is near or even above 32
degrees.
Do you know???
•
•
•
•
•
Why are some snowflakes “six sided” or “Hexagonal” in shape”?
What is “Graupel Snow?
Can nature produce snow when the temperature at the earth’s surface is above
32oF?
How does dust or biological particles help in the formation of natural snowflakes?
What scientific process helps in the freezing of the water droplets?
The Heat Factor
Water is a unique material; it expands when it freezes making it less dense. That is why
your ice cubes float and last a long time. Liquid water always has a certain amount of
“heat” to keep it liquid. Therefore water must be cooled, removing this heat, in order for
water to freeze. A large amount of heat removal (cooling) is required in snowmaking.
The water molecules slow down as this “heat” is removed allowing them to align in the
familiar hexagonal crystals. These will stick together in the formation of snowflakes.
During snow formation and the snowmaking process, this heat is dissipated into the air,
the water droplets cool as they fall to the ground. If there is enough “hang time” the
droplets form snow before they land.
Do you know???
•
•
•
What happens to liquid water as it freezes?
Why do snowmaking systems use a “cooling pond” to cool their snowmaking
water?
Why is “Hang Time” important?
The Nucleation Factor
Oddly enough, water doesn't automatically freeze at "freezing temperature" 32 degrees
Fahrenheit / 0 degrees Celsius. You have to cool pure water to a much lower
temperature (as low as -40 F / -40 C) for it to lose enough heat energy to change form.
Usually, however, water in a cloud does freeze around 32 F / 0 C
because of the work of nucleators, tiny bits of naturallyoccurring material that help water molecules coalesce. The
nucleators attract water molecules and help them stick together
and reduce their energy to the point that they form ice crystals.
These nucleators in snow crystals are small dirt bits, bacteria
and other material floating around in the atmosphere. Water
condenses onto the nucleator, which becomes the nucleus -the center -- of the snow crystal.
As the snow crystal moves around the cloud, more water particles
condense onto it and freeze into crystals. This collection of individual
crystals forms a snowflake. As the snow flake grows heavier, it falls
toward the earth. If it is cold enough the whole way down, the flake will still
be frozen when it reaches the surface and accumulates in your back your
and on the ski slopes.
Do you know???
•
•
•
How do dust particles in water help the freezing process?
What do snowmaking crews do to help the water freeze?
How would adding “Nucleators” to water help in snowmaking?
The Evaporation Factor and Relative Humidity
How do snow-makers determine if the conditions are right? It turns out they need a lot
more information than they can get from an ordinary thermometer. Standard
thermometers measure the dry bulb temperature of the atmosphere; but the most
important factor for snow making conditions is the wet bulb temperature.
The wet bulb temperature is a function of the dry bulb temperature and the relative
humidity, the amount of water vapor in the air. Liquid water cools itself by evaporating
some water as water vapor. This is a natural cooling process much like your body feels
cooler when you perspire. This releases heat, and so lowers the energy level in the
water. When there is more water vapor (moisture) in the atmosphere, water or snow*
can't evaporate as much because the air is already saturated with water to a high
degree. Consequently, water then cools more slowly when the humidity is high, and
more quickly when the humidity is low. (* Snow actually does evaporate through a process called
“sublimation.”)
For this reason, humidity is a very important factor in determining snow making
conditions. When the humidity level is low enough, you can actually form snow even
when the dry bulb temperature is several degrees above freezing. If the relative
humidity is high, say a foggy 100 percent, then the wet bulb temperature and the dry
bulb temperature will be exactly the same. Even if both are at the freezing temperature,
you might have rain instead of snow because the air saturation slows the cooling
process down so much that freezing of the water particles will not happen.
Do you know???
•
•
•
Why is it important for snowmaking to have low relative humidity condition?
How does the evaporation process help in the freezing of water molecules?
How would the size of the water droplet affect the freezing process?
Snow Making is an Art in Wisconsin
Man-made Snow Comes Close to Nature’s Snowflake
The Snowmaking Systems
The Reservoirs
All snowmaking systems start with a water supply; usually a nearby natural or man-made pond
or reservoir. It is important that the reservoir be large enough to adequately supply the pumping
system.
Only water makes snow and it starts with a large reservoir near the pumping station. Water
stored in the pond is cooled as it is exposed to the cold air temperature. Some ski areas
“aerate” the pond to keep the surface open, cooling the deep water below the surface where it is
drawn for snowmaking. These open surfaces are dangerous. That is why it is important to stay
off the thin ice of snowmaking ponds.
Do you Know?
•
Name two advantages of “Aerating” snowmaking ponds.
The Pumping Station
Water is pumped from the pond using large turbine pumps through underground pipes that take
the water to all the ski runs. Hoses are connected to the hydrants located on the side of the ski
runs and then connected to a series of different snow guns.
One of the major costs in snowmaking is the electricity needed to run
these large turbine water pumps. These turbines pump many gallons
per minute to the slopes through miles of large diameter pipes. The
water does not freeze in these pipes because it is moving very fast.
But if the water pipes are on the surface next to the ski runs, those
pipes must be drained when the system is shut down
Do you know?
•
Once the water leaves the pump house, pushed by the pumps, where does it go?
The “Man-Made Snow
Man-made snow will go through the same “freezing’ process as natural snow. Snow
making crews will place snowmaking machines around a ski slope, use them to spray
small water droplets into the air, expose them to a nucleation particle added to the water
and watch them freeze into a local man-made snowstorm.
It takes a large amount of water to make snow. Water is stored in a large reservoir near
the pumping station. Most systems use 200,000 gallons to make one foot on one acre
(one acre-foot) of ski slope. Many ski areas in Wisconsin use over 50 million gallons
each year to cover all the slopes with over four feet of snow. This is enough snow to fill
Lambeau Field over the top like a snow cone.
The Snow “Guns” or “Snowmaking Machines”
There are three types of “snow guns”. Airless or Water Only snow guns, Air/Water
snow guns and Fan Guns sometimes called snow Cannons. Regardless of the type of
equipment used, all snow making machines need to spray the water into the air as small
water droplets.
Airless or Water Only snow guns will use high water
pressure through small nozzles stationed high above the
ground to give the water particles enough “hang time” to
freeze into snow. The high pressure also helps “atomize”
the water into small droplets and because of the rapid drop
in pressure as the water leaves the nozzles there is a
cooling affect to assist with the snow flake formation.
Air/Water Snow Guns use a combination of high
pressure air and high pressure water to break
the water particles into smaller droplets. Here
again because the water leaves the nozzles in a
small droplet size, it will freeze into snow before
it lands on the ground.
Fan Guns or Cannons use the same concept to break
the water into small droplets but they add a fan to blow
the droplets high into the air to add “Hang Time” allowing
the formation of larger snowflakes. Fan Guns also add a
high pressure “mist” to act as nucleators to further help
the droplets freeze into snowflakes.
Do you know???
•
•
•
•
What are the three types of snowmaking machines?
Describe which snowgun would make the most snow and why.
Which type of snowgun would create the largest coverage on the slopes?
How does the “Nucleation Process” help the fan guns?
The Final Step… Snow Grooming
It is very difficult to evenly coat the entire surface of the ski runs with the snowguns only.
Snow falls from the snow making machines under its “plume” into piles of fresh snow.
Snowmakers then allow time for the snow pile to “cure” when each of the snowflakes
harden and dry, freezing more solidly.
The snow grooming process then starts with using large grooming tractors to push the
piles around the slope, smoothing the snow surface into and even coating over the
entire width of the ski slope. Finally, the same tractors pull a powerful “Tiller” and Snow
Comb” to finish the snow surface into a smooth corduroy surface.
Tractors are powerful enough to groom even steep slopes while traveling either uphill or
downhill. On the steepest slopes, specially equipped “Wench-cats” connect a strong
wench to a fixed object uphill to help pull the grooming tractors up the slope.
Some tractors are built with narrow tracks to groom the narrow chutes for snow tubing.
These powerful tractors cost over $350,000 each. Ski areas invest large sums of money
in tractors to meet the needs of all their guests whether they are skiers, snowboarders
or snow tubers.
Do you know???
•
•
•
Why is it necessary for ski hill operators to use snow grooming machines?
What creates the corduroy surface behind the snow groomers?
Why would tubing operations use a narrow grooming tractor?
And you thought it was easy fooling Mother Nature.
Ski areas all over the globe supplement their annual snowfall with their own
snowmaking systems. This is especially important in Wisconsin where the average
natural snow fall is just 46 inches. Snowmaking is even more important in El Nino years
which offer limited natural snow and small snowmaking windows of opportunity.
Even if there is no natural snow in your back yard, ski areas across the state will make
snow whenever the conditions allow, usually starting at around 28oF. (Ahhh but don’t
forget the humidity factor. Wet bulb could be lower.)
While it seems a complicated process, ski areas have converted their methods to the
most efficient and environmentally friendly systems available. Most snowmaking pumps
are highly efficient variable frequency electric motors and environmentally friendly snow
guns. Even the latest technology in emissions and fuel-efficient grooming tractors are
used. Ski areas simply “borrow” many gallons of water from their reservoirs and return
the water to their storage ponds, nearby streams and water tables every spring during
the snow melt-off.
So next time you are sliding down the slope whether there is snow in your yard or not,
you know that while you slept ski area operators have been busy preparing the ski runs,
snowboard parks and tubing areas for your family fun.
Get to your local Wisconsin ski area; enjoy the day and find a snowmaker to thank.
Skiing Wisconsin