The Midwest of the United States
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.
the heaviest hailstone on record fall was.... 1130
because they are frozen rain drops
Hailstones kill people by fall in far from the sky and falling faster till it will do damage to the cerebrum.
== == 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!
Hailstones are formed in thunderstorms when updrafts carry raindrops into extremely cold regions of the atmosphere, where they freeze into ice pellets. As the hailstones are lifted and fall repeatedly within the storm, they accumulate layers of ice until they become heavy enough to fall to the ground as hail.
It depends on how much they weigh. Some have caused a lot of damage, but it's usually to cars and buildings. hailstones are little blocks of ice which fall from the sky.technically hailstones are just frozen rain drops.I wouldn't think hailstones are dangerous as they melt the minute they touch the floor but i guess they could be dangerous if they had a sharp edge.
Hailstones remain suspended in a cloud due to the strong updrafts present within the cloud. As the hailstones are being formed, they are continuously lifted higher into the colder regions of the cloud by these updrafts. This cycle repeats until the hailstones become too heavy and fall to the ground as precipitation.
Hailstones are basically frozen raindrops. Temperatures are so cold at higher altitudes the water (rain) freezes... and they DONT stay on the ground like snow they land like rain does!!!!!
Hailstones start off as a snowflake. In order to become a hailstone, a upwind has to blow it back up into the cloud and collect more water, snow, or ice. Then it freezes. This process can happen over and over again until the hailstone is heavy enough to fall out of the cloud. That's the process of a hailstone.
Without air resistance, hailstones in a hailstorm would accelerate due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2) until they eventually reach their terminal velocity, which is around 108 km/h (67 mph) for large hailstones. The actual velocity of hailstones would depend on their size and mass.
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.