Home / Editor's Pick /

Weather curiosity: Why does it feel quieter after snow?

08:00
11 March 2023

Weather curiosity
Why does it feel quieter after snow?

Snow fallsLike many areas Saddleworth, Oldham saw heavy snow this week, quietening the world. - © picture alliance

Large areas of the UK and Ireland saw snowfall in the last few days, have you ever noticed how quiet the world seems when it's snowing?

Some of this can be explained by the fact that people tend to stay home when it’s snowing.

This means there are fewer cars on the road and less people around. But it’s also due to the delicate structure of a snowflake.

Sound travels in waves and needs to vibrate the molecules of whatever it’s travelling through in order to be transmitted.

Snowflakes, however, have holes and gaps in their structure. This reduces any vibrations, which helps dampen sound and reduces noise.

It’s nature’s way of taking a break. Make the most of it, because when snow begins to melt, it’s shape changes and the silence is broken.

Ryan Hathaway
More on the topic
Friday 1 August 2025

Main impacts in the north

Storm Floris named for Monday
Thursday 31 July 2025

Brewing in the Atlantic

Summer storm to start the week?
Temperature map showing very hot temperatures across the Mediterranean.
Thursday 7 August 2025

Holiday hot spots

Intense heat in the Mediterranean
All weather news
This might also interest you
Weather map showing heavy showers and thunderstorms breaking out in England.
Thursday 31 July 2025

Breakfast brief

Showers turn heavy, potentially thundery
Wind map showing the UK and Ireland showing an area of low pressure to the north-west which brings stronger winds to northern areas of the UK.
Wednesday 6 August 2025

After a brief pause

Fresh low brings renewed winds
Wind map of the UK and Ireland, framed to show the Atlantic Ocean where an icon indicates the location of a low-pressure system west of the UK.
Wednesday 6 August 2025

Breakfast brief

Calm day, fresh pressure area tonight
All articles
Weather & Radar

www.weatherandradar.ie

facebooktwitteryouTubeContact uslinkList
Privacy Policy | Legal info | Accessibility statement