Cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail comes from cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail can form in thunderstorms associated with other types of clouds, such as supercell clouds or multicell storms. These types of storms have strong updrafts and downdrafts that can support the development of hailstones.
No, hail typically forms in cumulonimbus clouds due to strong updrafts and freezing temperatures at high altitudes. Nimbostratus clouds are generally associated with steady, light to moderate precipitation, such as rain or snow, and do not have the intense vertical growth needed for hail formation.
Cumulonimbus clouds are most likely to result in hail and lightning. These are large, towering clouds associated with thunderstorms. The strong updrafts and downdrafts within cumulonimbus clouds promote the formation of hail and the development of lightning.
In Earth, the clouds has rain, snow, and hail. But in Neptune, they clouds doesn't has snow or hail.
stratus, cumulus, cirrus, stratocumulus, nimbostratus, altostratus,altocumulus, cirrostratus, cirrocumulus, cumulonibus, and nimbostratus
Many cumulonimbus clouds do bring hail, but most don't
Cumulonimbus clouds.
No, the noun 'hail' is a common noun, a general word for pieces of ice that fall from clouds like rain.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, a place, or a thing; for example, the Hail & Hog Kitchen and Tap in Ashburn VA or "Hail to the Chief", the official Presidential Anthem of the United States.The word 'hail' is also a verb: hail, hails, hailing, hailed.
No. Cirrus clouds a wispy, high-altitude clouds. They are not strm clouds. All hail and nearly all thunder are associated with cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail comes from cumulonimbus clouds.
Rain or hail, usually, with the addition of hail or sleet.
rain: the clouds collect eough water from the ocean to the clouds and the clouds get too heavy and have to fall down. hail: the water from the clouds get frozen and turn into snow
Hail is a product of thunderstorms, which are cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail.
Hail forms from clouds when ice crystals in clouds become too large.