Hailstones in Our Lawn

Hail is a form of precipitation that falls from the sky as pellets of ice. The pellets can range in size from small pea-sized pellets to hailstones as large as grapefruits (more on hail size below).

The formation of hail means a severe thunderstorm is likely in your vicinity. You should monitor your weather situation closely for thunder, lightning, torrential rain, and possibly even tornadoes.

Because it’s made of ice, hail is often mistaken as a cold weather event, but in reality, it is associated with severe thunderstorms — not winter weather.

While hailstorms technically can occur year-round, some of the most destructive hail events have occurred at the height of summer. (This makes sense seeing as how hail is associated with thunderstorms, and thunderstorms, in turn, are most common in the summertime when there’s an abundance of heat in the atmosphere to help fuel their development.) 

Hail Forms High Up, in Cold Clouds

If hail is a summer rather than winter weather event, how do temperatures get cold enough to form ice?

Hailstones form inside of cumulonimbus clouds that can tower at heights of up to 50,000 feet. While the lower regions of these storms contain warm air, the upper regions are below freezing. strong updrafts   Updrafts within the storm system can whisk raindrops up into this sub-zero region, causing them to freeze into ice crystals. These ice particles are then carried back down into the cloud’s lower levels by the downdraft where it thaws and collects additional water droplets and back up via the updraft where it re-freezes.

This cycle may continue multiple times. With each trip above and below the freezing level, a new layer of ice is added to the frozen droplet until it grows too heavy for the updraft to carry it. (If you cut a hailstone in half, you would see alternating concentric layers inside it, resembling tree rings.) It then falls out of the cloud to the ground.

The stronger the updraft, the heavier a hailstone it can carry, and the longer that hailstone cycles through the freezing process (that is, the larger it grows).

Short-Lived Storms

Hail usually forms over an area and leaves within a few minutes. However, there have been instances when it stayed in the same area for several minutes, leaving several inches of ice covering the ground.

Hailstone Size and Speed

Hailstones are measured according to their diameter. But unless you have a knack for eyeballing measurements or are able to slice a hailstone in half, it’s easier to estimate its size by comparing it to everyday items.

DescriptionSize (Diameter)Typical Fall Speed
Pea1/4 inch
Marble1/2 inch
Dime/Penny3/4 inch43 mph
Nickel7/8 inch
Quarter1 inch50 mph
Golf Ball1 3/4 inch66 mph
Baseball2 3/4 inch85 mph
Grapefruit4 inch106 mph
Softball4 1/2 inch

Source(s):

ThoughtCo

Images Clicked by Farooq Bhai and Iram

Advertisement

About Rashid Faridi

I am Rashid Aziz Faridi ,Writer, Teacher and a Voracious Reader.
This entry was posted in earth. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.