i dont know exactly but i think around negative ten degrees
hail is made up of pieces of ice, the solid state of water. So hail is solid.
When water droplets in the air become heavier than the air can hold, they fall to the ground as precipitation. This can take the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail depending on the temperature and atmospheric conditions.
When the temperature of a cloud is below -18 degrees C, the cloud consists almost entirely of ice crystals. These ice crystals can grow and combine to form larger ice particles, leading to precipitation such as snow or hail.
Rain, snow, sleet or hail that falls to the ground
Tornadoes are typically associated with heavy rainfall, hail, and sometimes lightning. The strong updrafts within a tornado can cause water droplets to be lifted into the cloud where they freeze and form hailstones.
Hail is most likely to form in frozen tundra's and in places that have a big amount of precipitation (rain) for example, if there's a storm with a LOT of rain and the temperature is currently below freezing (33F) then hail is most likely to form there. if the temperature is a negative number like -15F then hail will become bigger and it can have a chance of destroying something
Rain or hail.
Yes, hail is a form of precipitation.
The five forms of precipitation are rain, snow, sleet, hail, and drizzle. Each form occurs depending on the temperature and atmospheric conditions in the atmosphere.
Hail is most likely to form in frozen tundra's and in places that have a big amount of precipitation (rain) for example, if there's a storm with a LOT of rain and the temperature is currently below freezing (33F) then hail is most likely to form there. if the temperature is a negative number like -15F then hail will become bigger and it can have a chance of destroying something
The Temperature Of Hail Is Round About -5C
it can form into hail, snowflakes, etc.........it can take the form of rain,snow,hail..
Precipitation in the form of rain sleet ,snow, hail
winter
hail
Hail is generated by upper cloud wind driving frozen water particles up and through clouds. They gain a little more water, it gets frozen and when the wind can no longer carry it up it falls. The temperature on the ground doesn't effect this process much.
Yes. Hail is produce by thunderstorms, which form from cumulonimbus clouds.