yes
Precipitation, like rain, when the temperature in the clouds is below freezing. Sleet and hail also require strong updrafts in the clouds that can lift the snow back up into the cloud repeatedly for additional coatings of ice, until it becomes too heavy for the updrafts to lift again.
The type of clouds that bring rain, sleet, snow, and hail are typically cumulonimbus clouds. These clouds are dense and vertically developed, often associated with thunderstorms and severe weather. They contain significant moisture and can produce a variety of precipitation forms depending on temperature and atmospheric conditions. Additionally, nimbostratus clouds can also bring steady, continuous precipitation like rain or snow.
The 4 main precipitaions are rain, hail, sleek and snow
Rain forms when water droplets in clouds grow and combine until they are heavy enough to fall to the ground. Sleet occurs when rain freezes before reaching the ground. Snow forms when water vapor in clouds freezes into ice crystals. Hail forms when strong updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops into the colder upper atmosphere, where they freeze and grow larger before falling to the ground.
Yes. Wetlands do not have a unique climate and can be found in a variety of climates, many of which can get both hail and sleet.
* Rain * Snow * Sleet * Hail * Freezing Rain
Snow,rain,sleet,and hail.
Rain, hail, sleet, snow, fog.
Snow, hail, sleet, acid and dirt.
Rain or hail, usually, with the addition of hail or sleet.
The puddles from rain evaporates to the clouds and then falls as rain, snow, sleet or hail.. And it just continues.
When rain falls from clouds and freezes along the way, it is called "sleet."
The four forms of precipitation are rain, snow, sleet, and hail. Rain is liquid water falling from clouds, snow is frozen water crystals, sleet is a mixture of rain and snow that partially melts before reaching the ground, and hail is round balls of ice that form in strong thunderstorms.
Precipitation falls from clouds in the atmosphere. It can include rain, snow, sleet, or hail depending on the temperature and atmospheric conditions at the time.
The main types of precipitation are rain, snow, sleet, and hail. Rain is liquid water droplets falling from clouds, snow is ice crystals falling from clouds, sleet is a mix of rain and snow or ice pellets, and hail is ice pellets formed in thunderstorm updrafts.
When hail falls from clouds, it is called a hailstorm or hail shower. Hail is formed when updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops upward into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, where they freeze into ice pellets before falling back to the ground.
Precipitation, like rain, when the temperature in the clouds is below freezing. Sleet and hail also require strong updrafts in the clouds that can lift the snow back up into the cloud repeatedly for additional coatings of ice, until it becomes too heavy for the updrafts to lift again.