Categories: Science

Will we get a white Christmas? Well, that depends on your definition of ‘white Christmas’

If you look forward to a white Christmas each year then statistically, according to the Met Office, you are in luck…but it all depends on what your definition of a ‘white Christmas’ is.

As the Met Office’s infographic below hints we’ve had a lot of white Christmases in the past 50 years: but their definition of a white Christmas might differ a bit from ours. The Met Office explains;

the [technical] definition [of a white Christmas] used most widely, notably by those placing and taking bets, is for a single snowflake (perhaps among a mixed shower of rain and snow) to be observed falling in the 24 hours of 25 December at a specified location.

Taking this definition the Office says just under every three Christmases out of four will be a white one (but not this year). But a single snow flake does not make for a winter wonderland.  So while we might technically have a good chance of a white Christmas that doesn’t mean that we will see snow on the ground.

…For most parts of the United Kingdom, Christmas is right at the beginning of the period when it’s likely to snow. Looking at climate history, wintry weather is more likely between January and March than December. Snow or sleet falls on average 5 days in December, compared to 7.6 days in January, 6.8 days in February and 6 days in March.

In 2010 83% of the UK’s Met Office stations recorded snow on the ground and 19% recorded sleet and snow showers on Christmas Day which “was extremely unusual.”  By contrast in 2009 57% of stations had snow on the ground but fewer, 13%, recorded sleet or snow showers.  Of course, all this depends on where in the UK you are: the further north, the greater your chances of a snowy Christmas Day. Between 2005 and 2008 no ground snow or snow/sleet showers were recorded.

Looking specifically at Christmas 2011 the Met Office says December 25 will be warm and breezy and “[it] is likely to be far from memorable in the record books.”

So, each year the chances are good that we’ll technically have a white Christmas but that doesn’t mean we’ll be able to make snow men.

Click for a larger view, visit the Met Office website here.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

UN finalizes neurotech ethics draft, to be adopted at General Conference

The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) finalizes its "Recommendation on the Ethics…

3 hours ago

Inside the Dead Internet Theory: Profits in a World Run by Bots

The dead internet theory is a conspiracy theory that goes: Most of the content we…

1 day ago

Check out the cool new pet-tech at Leap Venture Studio’s 9th Cohort Demo Day

Pet lovers are increasingly turning into tech lovers as well as the pet care world…

5 days ago

Tony Blair wants UK to enable animal gene editing, fund precision-bred livestock

Is genetically editing animals really about preventing pandemics, or is there something deeper to it?…

1 week ago

With space economy projected to reach $944 billion, Nisum and DeepSpace Technology partner-up to drive AI innovation to infinity and beyond

With the rise of GenAI dominating conversations in recent years, it can be easy to…

1 week ago

US should study Ukraine war, dominate AI drone tech: Eric Schmidt

AI is an all purpose tool, for good or ill, and Schmidt is placing his…

2 weeks ago