Condensation forming, on a window for instance, is a change of state from vapour to liquid. Freezing is also a change of state, from liquid to solid
Ice pellets are commonly referred to as sleet. Hail is similar, but is larger (5mm or more) and is formed from small pieces of ice. Ice pellets and Hail have different meteorological designations.
Pieces of ice falling from clouds is called snow or hail.
When water vapor freezes directly into ice without turning into liquid water first, it forms a process called sublimation. Sublimation is the transition of a substance directly from the solid phase to the gas phase without passing through the intermediate liquid phase.
Yes. The word "precipitation" covers any product of condensation. Put simply, it is when cloud particles become too heavy to stay suspended in the air, so they fall to the earth. This covers rain, sleet, snow, frost, hail, snow, etc.
Hail Stones
ice,frost,blizzard,hail,icy,glace and thats it.
hail storms, thunder storms, frost , ice and really cold temperatures
The 5 forms of precipitation such as:-rain-dew-snow-hail-frost-sleet-glaze
In the phrase "Hail Mary," the word "hail" is a greeting or salutation, similar to saying "hello" or "greetings." It is used to show respect and honor to Mary, the mother of Jesus, in the Catholic prayer known as the Hail Mary.
Wet hail is hail that has a coating of liquid water on it.
The cast of Hail Satan - 2012 includes: Michael Boisvert as Jason Darren Frost as Ted Anthony Gerbrandt as Danny Kaitlyn Leeb as Becca Joe MacLeod as Ben
they are similar because they are all precipitation and a form of water. rain is liquid. sleet is liquid that freezes before it hit the ground but then melts when it does hit the ground (like a slushy) and hail is completely frozen into a chunk of ice
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Insects, lack of rain, late or early frost, hail storms, crops damaged by too much rain or wind.
A hail storm and snowstorm are similar because the both are cold both have the word snow at the end and both produce something frozen from clouds the only difference is snow is powderey and hail is hard ice balls. They are definently similar
Similar to the English word "hail" it was a form of greeting, much like hello.
It is a poem by American author James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916), first published in 1883. There is another poem about pumpkins and frost that is similar to Riley's poem but goes: When the frost is on the pumpkin and the chill is on the vine...