No. In fact hail forms best when it is warm. No matter how warm the weather is at the ground, it will always be well below freezing in the upper troposphere. Hail is a phenomenon that occurs during thunderstorms with strong updrafts, which form best when air near the ground is warm and moist.
Sleet, which is sometimes confused with hail, does require cold temperatures around freezing.
Hail is typically cold because it forms in cold thunderstorm clouds where temperatures at high altitudes are below freezing. As hail falls to the ground, it may retain its cold temperature even if it melts slightly on the way down.
Hail is cold because it is ice. More specifically, hail originates very high in the atmosphere, where it is always very cold. When a hailstone is large enough it falls back to the ground fast enough that it does not have time to warm back up.
No, blizzards do not produce hail. Blizzards are severe snowstorms characterized by strong winds and blowing snow, whereas hail is formed in thunderstorms when updrafts carry raindrops into cold upper atmospheres where they freeze into ice pellets.
A cold front is most likely to bring hail and tornadoes into an area. As the cold front advances, it forces warm, moist air to rise rapidly, creating instability that can lead to severe thunderstorms, hail, and tornado development.
A cold front would likely be a front that would produce hail and tornadoes in an area because cold fronts are different than warm fronts. Cold fronts are usually fronts that cause storms and if they have the right recipe it could produce damaging winds, hail and sometimes if it's very strong, tornadoes.
yes a hail cannon is cold
No. Hail is ice; it is cold.
Hail is typically cold because it forms in cold thunderstorm clouds where temperatures at high altitudes are below freezing. As hail falls to the ground, it may retain its cold temperature even if it melts slightly on the way down.
cold
somewhere cold
because ice is cold and hail is ice
something cold and wet and painful
Hail is cold because it is ice. More specifically, hail originates very high in the atmosphere, where it is always very cold. When a hailstone is large enough it falls back to the ground fast enough that it does not have time to warm back up.
No, blizzards do not produce hail. Blizzards are severe snowstorms characterized by strong winds and blowing snow, whereas hail is formed in thunderstorms when updrafts carry raindrops into cold upper atmospheres where they freeze into ice pellets.
hail
sometimes it isn't cold enough for the hail to fall in it's ice form.
There are many combinations that will work, but my five favorites are cold and hail, cold and storm, hail and lightning, hail and storm, and lightning and storm. You have to start breeding the dragons between 7:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.