Hail forms in cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, dense, and towering clouds associated with thunderstorms. Within these clouds, strong updrafts carry raindrops high into the atmosphere where they freeze, forming hailstones. These hailstones can grow larger as they are then circulated within the storm cloud before eventually falling to the ground.
Status
It is Sleet. Hail is when water droplets condense out of the cloud and are carried upwards in a draught to a colder refion, whereupon the water droplets freeze into ice. and fall to Earth as hail.
hail
it rains snow,rain,hail and sleet
Rain and snow are forms of precipitation that can undergo changes after leaving a cloud. Rain can freeze into sleet or hail if temperatures are cold enough, while snow can melt into rain if temperatures warm up.
Rain, snow, or hail.
Hail forms when updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops into colder regions of the atmosphere. As the raindrops freeze, they grow in size and eventually fall to the ground as hailstones. Hail is typically associated with cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds that produce thunderstorms.
When strong winds toss ice crystals up and down in a cloud, it can lead to the formation of hail. As the ice crystals are carried up and down in the cloud, they encounter different temperature zones that cause them to grow larger. Eventually, the ice crystals become too heavy to be supported by the wind and fall to the ground as hail.
Depending on the temperature and other conditions, it could be rain, snow or hail. But if the question is about what falls from cumulonimbus that most likely wouldn't fall from other cloud formations, then the answer would be hail. It's the vertical activity that gives the cumulonimbus cloud its distinctive shape, and it's the vertical activity that forms hail...especially large hail stones.
Hail falls as solid ice pellets from the cloud, not as liquid raindrops. It forms when strong updrafts in a thunderstorm carry raindrops into extremely cold regions of the atmosphere where they freeze into ice. Once the hailstones become too heavy for the updrafts to support, they fall to the ground.
That would be hail. Hail forms when updrafts in a cumulonimbus cloud carry raindrops into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze into layered lumps or balls of ice.
Hail comes from cumulonimbus clouds.
To create hail in Little Alchemy, you need to combine cloud and ice. Drag the cloud icon on top of the ice to make hail.
In a typical thunderstorm, lightning occurs before hail. Lightning is the result of electrical charges building up in the storm cloud, while hail forms when water droplets freeze and are carried by strong updrafts within the cloud. So, lightning usually precedes hail in the sequence of events during a thunderstorm.
yes it is
Hail is a product of thunderstorms, which are cumulonimbus clouds.
Yes, rising warm moist air adds energy to a cloud. This energy can be released in many forms (e.g. tornados, lightning) and the moisture can fall out in many forms too (e.g. rain, snow, sleet, hail).