Hail most often occurs ahead of the tornado but it also frequently found in the hook of the storm, which wraps around behind and to the left of the tornado (with respect to its movement) in the northern hemisphere and to the right of it in the Southern Hemisphere.
No, the presence of hail does not necessarily indicate that a tornado is imminent. While hail can be associated with severe thunderstorms that may produce tornadoes, it is not a definitive indicator of an imminent tornado.
No. Precipitation is water that falls from the sky in some form, such as rain, snow, or hail. A tornado is basically a violent wind storm. While tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and often by hail, this precipitation is not directly related to the tornado itself.
Yes, a thunderstorm that produces hail can be a good candidate to spawn a tornado. The strong updrafts that form hail in the storm can also create the necessary conditions for tornado development, such as a rotating updraft known as a mesocyclone. However, not all hail-producing storms will develop into tornadoes.
Tornadoes need thunderstorms to form and they usually form in the updraft portion of a supercell, which is in near the back of the storm. The downdraft portion, where most of the rain and hail can be found is in the from half.
It starts with a little bit of rain then to a heavy ran, then usually to a little bit of hail then to a heavy hail.
Hail
Tornadoes are often but not always accompanied by hail. However, the hail is not a result of the tornado itself but the storm that produces the tornado.
Tornadoes and hail are separate weather phenomena that can occur independently of each other. Tornadoes are violent rotating columns of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground, while hail is formed in strong thunderstorms and can fall to the ground before, during, or after a tornado forms.
It can. Hail often does come before a tornado, but most storms that produce hail do not produce tornadoes.
No, if there is a tornado or hail near a window is one of the least safe places to be.
No, the presence of hail does not necessarily indicate that a tornado is imminent. While hail can be associated with severe thunderstorms that may produce tornadoes, it is not a definitive indicator of an imminent tornado.
Tornadoes themselves are not the cause of hail, thunderstorms are. In order to produce hail a storm must have a strong updraft to keep hailstones in the air as they form and a fairly large amount of turbulence to create the cycle that forms hail. Tornadoes also need a strong updraft to form but also need other factors such as rotation in the storm to form, but this rotation isn't needed for hail.
No. Precipitation is water that falls from the sky in some form, such as rain, snow, or hail. A tornado is basically a violent wind storm. While tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and often by hail, this precipitation is not directly related to the tornado itself.
Often, but not always.
Yes, a thunderstorm that produces hail can be a good candidate to spawn a tornado. The strong updrafts that form hail in the storm can also create the necessary conditions for tornado development, such as a rotating updraft known as a mesocyclone. However, not all hail-producing storms will develop into tornadoes.
Tornadoes typically do not produce precipitation themselves. They form from severe thunderstorms that can produce heavy rain, hail, and sometimes even snow or sleet, but the tornado itself is a rotating column of air and not associated with specific types of precipitation.
Yes. The storm that produced the Joplin tornado also produced hail up to 1 inch in diameter in the Joplin area.