sometimes if it is a really bad storm
the 2nd Stage!
In a typical thunderstorm, lightning occurs before hail. Lightning is the result of electrical charges building up in the storm cloud, while hail forms when water droplets freeze and are carried by strong updrafts within the cloud. So, lightning usually precedes hail in the sequence of events during a thunderstorm.
The second stage during a thunderstorm is the mature stage. During this stage, updrafts continue to strengthen, causing the storm to reach its peak intensity, with heavy rainfall, strong winds, hail, lightning, and thunder.
Cumulonimbus clouds are present during a thunderstorm. These are large, towering clouds that are associated with heavy rain, thunder, lightning, hail, and sometimes tornadoes. They typically have a dark base and can reach great heights in the atmosphere.
Precipitation falls during the mature stage of a thunderstorm when the updraft and downdraft coexist, allowing rain, hail, or other forms of precipitation to reach the ground.
hail lighting wind hailstone
No. Hail consists of pieces of ice that fall during a thunderstorm. The energy they have is kinetic energy.
Ice pellets that form during a thunderstorm are called hail. Hailstones are formed when strong updrafts carry raindrops into a freezing level of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze and grow larger before falling to the ground.
A thunderstorm. A thunderstorm produces thunder and lightning, rain, and not very often but hail as well.
No. Hail is ice that falls during a thunderstorm.
the 2nd Stage!
In a typical thunderstorm, lightning occurs before hail. Lightning is the result of electrical charges building up in the storm cloud, while hail forms when water droplets freeze and are carried by strong updrafts within the cloud. So, lightning usually precedes hail in the sequence of events during a thunderstorm.
The second stage during a thunderstorm is the mature stage. During this stage, updrafts continue to strengthen, causing the storm to reach its peak intensity, with heavy rainfall, strong winds, hail, lightning, and thunder.
if the temperature is above 90 degrees ,the answer is no !
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.
Cumulonimbus clouds are present during a thunderstorm. These are large, towering clouds that are associated with heavy rain, thunder, lightning, hail, and sometimes tornadoes. They typically have a dark base and can reach great heights in the atmosphere.
Precipitation falls during the mature stage of a thunderstorm when the updraft and downdraft coexist, allowing rain, hail, or other forms of precipitation to reach the ground.