Precipitation
Frozen water droplets are known as hail.
Cumulonimbus clouds.
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.
water vapor, which then condenses as it cools with the rising altitude and falls as rain
Water that falls from clouds as rain, sleet, or hail is a form of precipitation. Rain consists of liquid water droplets that form when atmospheric moisture condenses and coalesces. Sleet is composed of small ice pellets that form when raindrops freeze before reaching the ground, while hail consists of larger ice balls that develop in strong thunderstorms with intense updrafts. Each type of precipitation occurs under different atmospheric conditions and temperatures.
it can form into hail, snowflakes, etc.........it can take the form of rain,snow,hail..
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.
The term for liquid or solid water that falls from clouds to the earth's surface is precipitation. This includes rain, snow, sleet, and hail.
Frozen water droplets are known as hail.
The puddles from rain evaporates to the clouds and then falls as rain, snow, sleet or hail.. And it just continues.
That is precipitation, which is any form of water - liquid or solid - that falls from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface.
Hail Stones
Cumulonimbus clouds.
When rain falls from clouds and freezes along the way, it is called "sleet."
there are different forms of water that fall from the clouds, one is,which everyone knows is rain.it is the basic form of precipitation. the others are hail stones snowflakes,snow usually when the temperatures are pretty low.
Precipitation occurs due to the immense collection of water vapor in the form of clouds. When the water vapor in these clouds gets too heavy, it falls. If it's cold enough, it falls as snow, or sometimes hail. Usually, however, it falls as rain.
Rain, snow, and hail are all types of precipitation. Rain is liquid water falling from clouds, snow is frozen water vapor that falls in flakes, and hail is frozen raindrops that are larger and formed in thunderstorms.