What your looking for is this word Megacryometeor
have a look at this page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megacryometeor
Also check out hale, hailstones
Mostly ice crystals.
snow
A wispy cloud is likely a cirrus cloud, which is a type of high-level cloud typically composed of ice crystals. Cirrus clouds are thin and wispy in appearance, often indicating fair weather but can also signal a change in the weather.
Yes, under certain conditions, it is possible for a cloud to freeze. This can occur at high altitudes where temperatures are extremely cold, causing the water droplets in the cloud to freeze into ice crystals.
Common cloud seeding materials include silver iodide, potassium iodide, and sodium chloride. These materials can help promote the formation of ice crystals in clouds and potentially enhance precipitation.
Hail starts out as a small, frozen water droplet or ice particle that is lifted by strong updrafts in a thunderstorm cloud. As the particle moves up and down in the cloud, it collects more water and freezes into a larger hailstone before eventually falling to the ground.
We understand that the electron is the particle that is found in what is called the electron cloud around the nucleus of an atom.
All snow begins as snow through what is called the Bergeron process. Water droplets within a cloud get drawn to the tiny ice crystals in the cloud due to their lower vapor pressure. In doing so, they diffuse onto the ice crystals, causing them to grow. When they become large enough, they fall out of the cloud as snowflakes.
Frozen raindrops are sleet, individual pellets of ice.Snow is formed by ice crystals that form around a particle of dust.Hail is a ball of frozen ice that accumulates by layers in a thunderstorm.
Clouds form when the water vapor condenses into small particles. The particles in clouds can either be liquid or solids. The liquid particles are called cloud droplets and the solid particles are called ice crystals! Both droplets and ice crystals require a solid particle to nucleate on - otherwise the moisture stays in the air in a supersaturated condition until something drastic happens to cause it to precipitate.
nucleus
Electrons.
No, it is not possible.
Variability in droplet and ice crystal sizes within a cloud can be observed through remote sensing techniques like lidar and radar, which measure backscattered signals from particles. Additionally, in-situ measurements from aircraft or ground-based instruments can capture the size distribution of particles within a cloud. These observations provide evidence for the presence of a variety of particle sizes in a cloud.
Electrons
Yes, hail is a form of solid precipitation that consists of balls or lumps of ice. Hail is created when raindrops are carried into colder regions of a storm cloud and freeze into ice pellets before falling to the ground.
Ice pellets, also known as sleet, are small balls of frozen raindrops. They form when rain freezes while falling through a layer of below-freezing air near the surface. As the frozen raindrops are carried up and down in a storm cloud, additional layers of ice can accumulate on them before reaching the ground.