fall and winter
Yes. Although it is relatively rare, Maine can get hail.
While Blythe, California, has experienced rare instances of hail, it is extremely unlikely for snow to fall in this desert climate due to the high temperatures. Snow is essentially unheard of in Blythe.
Snowflakes are lighter than the more frozen denser hail.
It is unlikely that it hails on Pluto as its thin atmosphere does not support weather phenomena like hail. The temperatures on Pluto are so cold that any precipitation would likely be in the form of ice or snow rather than hail.
It forms as hail. Hail actually starts out in the upper portion of a thunderstorm a graupel, a form of ice pellet somewhat between sleet and snow. The pellets collect layer after layer of ice until the fall out of the thunderstorm.
Depending upon the specific desert and season of the year, a desert may receive rain, sleet, hail, graupel or snow.
sometimes it isn't cold enough for the hail to fall in it's ice form.
Ice crystals that fall from the sky are called snowflakes.
Depending upon the particular desert and season of the year precipitation can fall as rain, hail, sleet, snow or graupel.
winter
The heaviest hail on record (currently) is 132 grams.
Yes. Although it is relatively rare, Maine can get hail.
No, hail doesn't fall in tornadoes, but it often falls near them.
Summer
Hail can form in clouds over the ocean, but it typically melts before reaching the surface due to the warmer ocean temperatures. If hail does fall into the ocean, it quickly melts and blends with the water.
it is call hail
Hail.