Well basically when it rains really heavily and its really cold at the same time the rain and the cold sort of unite and become these hard rocks.
Hope I helped see ya!
Hail Stones
Pieces of ice falling from clouds is called snow or hail.
Ice crystals that fall from the sky are called snowflakes.
Rain and hail can fall from the same storm because they are formed under different conditions in the atmosphere. Rain is formed when water droplets coalesce and become heavy enough to fall, while hail forms when strong updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops into colder regions of the atmosphere where they freeze into ice pellets. These ice pellets can then grow larger as they are tossed up and down by the updrafts, eventually becoming hailstones before falling to the ground.
Rain: Water droplets that fall from clouds. Snow: Ice crystals that fall from clouds. Sleet: Frozen raindrops that partially melt before reaching the ground. Hail: Ice pellets formed in thunderstorm updrafts.
Hail stones form in clouds through a process of ice crystal growth and water droplet accretion. Updrafts in the cloud carry the hail stones to higher altitudes where they can grow larger before eventually becoming too heavy and falling to the ground as hail.
Hail is made up of frozen pellets of rain that is made in cumulonimbus clouds. Hail is frozen water crystals that fall from the sky. Hail can range in size from an eighth of an inch to the size of a grapefruit.
Ammonia is not typically found in hail stones or clouds. Hail stones are formed from water droplets in thunderstorm updrafts, while clouds are made up of water droplets or ice crystals. Ammonia is more commonly found in certain industrial processes, cleaning products, and some natural environments.
False. Hail can fall outside the area directly below the cumulonimbus cloud in which it formed, especially in cases of strong winds that can carry hail for some distance from the storm.
No, hail generally only occurs in the summer.
Hail Stones
Hail stones. Gall stones. The Rolling Stones. Tombstones. Kidney stones.
Hail stones. Gall stones. The Rolling Stones. Tombstones. Kidney stones.
Hail stones. Gall stones. The Rolling Stones. Tombstones. Kidney stones.
Hail stones. Gall stones. The Rolling Stones. Tombstones. Kidney stones.
wind dosent have anything to do with hail storms it just moves it around ...
Hail is unlikely to fall in winter due to colder temperatures not conducive to the formation of hailstorms.