rain.
The hailstones struck the roof loudly during the storm.
Hailstones form inside thunderstorm clouds when supercooled water droplets freeze onto ice nuclei. As the hailstones grow, they eventually become too heavy for the updrafts in the storm to support, causing them to fall to the ground.
Large chunks of ice that are the size of baseballs are commonly referred to as hailstones. Hailstones form within severe thunderstorms when updrafts carry raindrops into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze and accumulate into the rounded shapes we recognize as hailstones.
Hailstones can have various shapes, including round, conical, or irregular. Their shape is influenced by factors such as the formation process, temperature gradients, and collisions with other hailstones or particles in the cloud.
These are called graupel or soft hail. Graupel forms when supercooled water droplets in a thunderstorm freeze on contact with ice nuclei, creating layered ice pellets. Graupel is typically smaller and softer than hailstones.
· hailstones (photographs) · herb garden · harmonica
well there is differnt sizes of the hailstones
No, hailstones are not round. They come in different shapes and sizes becasue they are so rough.
The hailstones are mas
The hailstones struck the roof loudly during the storm.
they want to
Hailstones and Halibut Bones - 1963 was released on: USA: 1963
Hailstones are composed of frozen water and do not have a distinct smell. The formation of hailstones occurs high in the atmosphere where there are no fragrances to impart any scent. Therefore, hailstones do not smell like mints or any other substance.
Hailstones start off as a snowflake. In order to become a hailstone, a upwind has to blow it back up into the cloud and collect more water, snow, or ice. Then it freezes. This process can happen over and over again until the hailstone is heavy enough to fall out of the cloud. That's the process of a hailstone.
It depends on how much they weigh. Some have caused a lot of damage, but it's usually to cars and buildings. hailstones are little blocks of ice which fall from the sky.technically hailstones are just frozen rain drops.I wouldn't think hailstones are dangerous as they melt the minute they touch the floor but i guess they could be dangerous if they had a sharp edge.
Hailstones are basically frozen raindrops. Temperatures are so cold at higher altitudes the water (rain) freezes... and they DONT stay on the ground like snow they land like rain does!!!!!
Hailstones form inside thunderstorm clouds when supercooled water droplets freeze onto ice nuclei. As the hailstones grow, they eventually become too heavy for the updrafts in the storm to support, causing them to fall to the ground.