Not always - it depends on the air temperature, wind - and the type of cloud. Hail is frozen water drops - that have been held in a cloud long enough to form multiple layers of ice around them. The hail 'stones' stay in the cloud until they become too heavy for air currents to keep them in the sky - and gravity takes over.
No, the weather has no influence on the Earth's crust.
That is most likely because tornadoes are less common than severe wind or hail, but more dangerous.
Because infrequent rains caused a desert environment to form in the first place.
Yes, hail can break or damage metal, especially if the hailstones are large and fall with significant force. Metal surfaces can dent, bend, or develop cracks due to the impact of hail. The extent of the damage depends on the size of the hailstones and the type of metal involved. However, thicker or more resilient metals are less likely to suffer severe damage compared to thinner or softer metals.
first-person; third-person
first-person;third person
Torrential rains are typically described as heavy, intense rainfall that pours down rapidly over a short period of time, leading to flooding and potential damage. This term is used when the rainfall is particularly heavy and exceeds normal intensity levels, often causing significant disruption.
Soft hail, also known as graupel, forms when supercooled water droplets freeze onto snowflakes or ice pellets. This process creates small, soft, and opaque pellets that typically occur in winter during thunderstorms or heavy snowfall. Soft hail is lighter and less dense than regular hail, making it less destructive.
you can, but it is less likely.
Like hail but less uniformly shaped, more irregular ice.
It depends on how you use them. At first if your less experienced they might but the better you get the less likely that they'll leave marks.
yes, but insurance normally will just say it is totaled and write you a check for the value of a car. its cheaper