Peak Season for Convergence Zone and rainbows

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PUGET SOUND, APRIL 10: Spring is here and with it comes days with a mix of sunshine and showers. Spring is also the peak time for the Puget Sound Convergence Zone. You’ve heard the term, but what does it really mean?

Imagine water in a stream flowing around a large rock. The water wraps around the rock and meets on the other side. On a grand scale, that’s what happens with westerly airflow off the Pacific as the airflow wraps around the Olympic Mountains and collides or ‘converges’ just east of the Olympics.

South Snohomish County is ground zero for the Puget Sound Convergence Zone. The air flows around the Olympics through the Strait of Juan de Fuca on the north side, and the Chehalis gap on the south side then collides, rises, and produces clouds and rain.

If it is cold enough, it can even snow like it did on April 18, 2008, with up to 10 inches of snow in parts of southern Snohomish County. Thunderstorms can also develop. With frequent, stronger flow through the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the Convergence Zone often drifts south into King County over time.

The Puget Sound Convergence Zone can occur anytime during the year, but the spring season is when it occurs most often. Ironically, areas to the north and south of the Convergence Zone tend to have large breaks in the cloud cover with periods of sunshine, such as north in the San Juan Islands and Skagit County, and south in areas such as Renton into Tacoma.

Spring also marks the peak of the North Sound rainbow season. Rainbows can occur any time of year, but the combination of spring showers and a higher sun angle creates a greater number of rainbows during the season.

Rainbows are created by sunlight and rainfall from clouds or water droplets hanging in the air after rainfall. Sunlight enters a water droplet, slowing and bending the light as it goes from air to denser water. The light reflects off the inside of each rain droplet, breaking it into its different colors. When the light then exits the rain droplets, it creates a rainbow.

Sunlight is composed of a spectrum of colors – many wavelengths of light. Violet is the shortest wavelength and bends the most. Red has the longest wavelength and bends the least. When you see a rainbow, the light reflecting back to you with the sun at your back will show all the colors between violet and red with violet on the bottom and red on the top.

Rainbows are among the most beautiful displays of nature. If you see one, take pictures and share them on Facebook, tagging the @everettpost.

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