they want to
The hailstones are mas
No, hailstones are not round. They come in different shapes and sizes becasue they are so rough.
A hailstorm is a weather event characterized by strong thunderstorms that produce hailstones. These hailstones are balls of ice that form within the clouds and fall to the ground during the storm. Hailstorms can cause damage to property and crops due to the size and speed of the hailstones.
Hailstones form inside thunderstorm clouds when supercooled water droplets freeze onto ice nuclei. As the hailstones grow, they eventually become too heavy for the updrafts in the storm to support, causing them to fall to the ground.
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When hailstones form, the change of state that occurs is liquid water droplets in the cloud freezing into ice pellets as they are carried up and down by strong air currents within the thunderstorm cloud.
A hailstorm is characterized by the formation of hailstones, which are balls of ice that form within thunderstorm clouds. Hailstorms typically occur in conjunction with severe weather, such as thunderstorms or tornadoes. The size of hailstones can vary greatly, from small pellets to large stones that can cause significant damage.
== == Hailstones are raindrops that freeze as they fall through layers of very cold air. When they fall down from the sky hailstones are usually as big as peas. Sometimes they can be as big as tennis balls - so watch out!
well there is differnt sizes of the hailstones
Large chunks of ice that are the size of baseballs are commonly referred to as hailstones. Hailstones form within severe thunderstorms when updrafts carry raindrops into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze and accumulate into the rounded shapes we recognize as hailstones.
The hailstones struck the roof loudly during the storm.
The velocity of hailstones can vary significantly depending on their size and the conditions of the storm they form in. Typically, hailstones can fall at speeds ranging from 20 to 100 miles per hour (32 to 161 kilometers per hour). Larger hailstones, especially those that are caught in strong updrafts, may reach even higher speeds before hitting the ground. The exact velocity at which a hailstone falls will depend on factors like its mass and the atmospheric conditions during its descent.