Summer mornings can bring an interesting form of fog: Ground fog. According the American Meteorological Dictionary, a ground fog is defined as a fog that hides less than 0.6 of the sky and does not extend to the base of any clouds that may lie above it. A ground fog typically forms at night, when air in a shallow layer near the surface cools sharply to its dew point, making the relative humidity 100%. It then persists for a short time after sunrise, until sunlight heats the air enough to lower the relative humidity. As an obstruction to vision in an aviation weather observation, ground fog is encoded GF.
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Mary Knapp, Weather Data Library
mknapp@ksu.edu