Home / Editor's Pick /

The real shape of a falling raindrop

12:00 PM
September 3, 2022

Like half a burger bun
The real shape of a falling raindrop

raindrop-shutterstocks

Contrary to what you might think, raindrops are not actually tear-shaped. In fact, some raindrops are almost spherical when they fall while others look like the top of a burger bun because of the flow of air.

High up in the atmosphere, water droplets form around dust particles in a spherical shape because of the surface tension of water. Smaller raindrops then have a higher surface water tension while larger raindrops have a lower surface water tension.

When the raindrop is big enough to fall, it does. If the raindrop is less than one millimeter in size, it is able to maintain is spherical shape due to its surface water tension. However, if it is between 2-3 millimeters, the raindrop will being to lose its shape as it falls.

This is because air flow on the bottom of the raindrop is greater than the airflow above it creating pressure. This then causes the bottom of the raindrop to flatten out, while the top of the rainfall remains curved, like a burger bun.

But don’t raindrops often collide with other raindrops when they are falling making them bigger? The answer is yes. However, once the raindrop gets to around four millimeters, they fall apart in the atmosphere and continue to fall as smaller raindrops.

So next time you want to doodle some raindrops, you’re better off drawing them as almost spherical or like the top of a burger bun!

Weather & Radar USA editorial team
More on the topic
setting-sun
Saturday, September 6, 2025

Coldest time of the day

Lowest temperature is just after sunrise
Dust cloud over Tucson alongside weather radar showing thunderstorms in Arizona.
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Fascinating phenomenon

Dust storm hit Phoenix last week
storm surge sandy
Saturday, September 27, 2025

The deadliest threat

How to stay safe from storm surge
All weather news
This might also interest you
Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Daily briefing

First clipper system triggers rain, winds
Monday, October 20, 2025

Daily briefing

Snow, heavy rain for the northern tier
Sunday, October 26, 2025

Jamaica, Cuba in path

Hurricane Melissa rapidly intensifies, catastrophic impacts
All articles
Weather & Radar

www.weatherandradar.com

instagramfacebookthreadsContact uslinkList
Privacy policy | Legal info | Accessibility statement