A powerhouse like the McLaren P1 is challenging enough to drive in its own right, but when you combine that with an event held at night and during a thunderstorm, where your only visibility comes from the few metres in - front of you that your headlights illuminate, and that's only in - between the moments that your wipers clear
the heavy rain droplets from your windshield, that you experience true difficulty.
Not exact matches
What Shaw and Cantrell want to better understand is how aerosols affect the size where cloud
droplets become
heavy enough to fall as
rain.
Clouds form when water condenses on particles of dust, and
rain falls when condensed water
droplets grow too
heavy to be suspended by updrafts in the atmosphere.
Chameleons do not typically drink standing water from a bowl; they prefer to lap up water
droplets that form on foliage after a dense
rain or after a
heavy misting session.
The limit to
droplet size is 16 to 20 microns because the
droplets then are
heavy enough to fall out as
rain.