Information about Hail
This article is about the precipitation. For other uses, see Hail (disambiguation).
| Part of the Nature series on Weather |
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• Spring • Summer • • Autumn • Winter • |
| Tropical |
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• Dry season • • Wet season |
| Storms |
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• Thunderstorm • Tornado • • Tropical Cyclone (Hurricane) • • Winter storm • Blizzard |
| Precipitation |
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• Fog • Drizzle • Rain • • Freezing rain • Sleet • • Hail • Snow |
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Hail is a form of precipitation which consists of balls or irregular lumps of ice (hailstones). Hailstones on Earth usually consist mostly of water ice and measure between 5 and 50 millimetres in diameter, with the larger stones coming from severe thunderstorms.[1] Hail is always produced by cumulonimbi (thunderclouds), usually at the front of the storm system, and is composed of transparent ice or alternating layers of transparent and translucent ice at least 1 mm thick. Small hailstones are less than 5 mm in diameter, and are reported as SHGS. Unlike ice pellets, they are layered and can be irregular and clumped together.
Hail formation
Hail forms on condensation nuclei such as dust, insects, or ice crystals, when supercooled water freezes on contact. Hailstones are usually from the size of a pea to the size of a golfball. In clouds containing large numbers of supercooled water droplets, these ice nuclei grow quickly at the expense of the liquid droplets because the saturation vapor pressure over ice is slightly less than the saturation vapor pressure over water. If the hailstones grow large enough, latent heat released by further freezing may melt the outer shell of the hailstone. The growth that follows, usually called wet growth, is more efficient because the liquid outer shell allows the stone to accrete other smaller hailstones in addition to supercooled droplets. These winds hold the rain and freeze it. As the process repeats, the hail grows increasingly larger. Once a hailstone becomes too heavy to be supported by the storm's updraft it falls out of the cloud. When a hailstone is cut in half, a series of concentric rings, like that of an onion, is revealed. These rings reveal the total number of times the hailstone had traveled to the top of the storm before falling to the ground.Ideal conditions for hail formation
The largest hailstone ever measured, 17.8 cm (7.0 in) in diameter with a 47.6 cm (18.75 in) circumference.
Costly or deadly hailstorms
- Around the 9th century, several hundred pilgrims were killed by a massive hailstorm in Roopkund, Uttarakhand, India.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/11/07/wind07.xml&sSheet=/news/2004/11/07/ixworld.html
- March 29, 1990: Last known hail fatality in the United States - Juan Oseguera, a nineteen year old man who died from head injuries after being hit by a softball sized hailstone in Lake Worth, Texas
- July 11 1990, Denver, Colorado, USA, Softball-sized hail destroyed roofs and cars, causing $625 million in total damage.
- September 7, 1991: a Labour Day thunderstorm caused $400 million worth of insurable damage in Calgary. Thirteen additional hailstorms between 1981 and 1998 caused an estimated $600 million in damage in the Calgary area alone.http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/sites/english/maps/environment/naturalhazards/majorhailstorms/hailstorms_stats_new.htmlhttp://www.springerlink.com/index/Q1032KK8U22Q5XXT.pdf
- May 5 1995, Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas, USA, $1.1 billion insured losses.
- April 14 1999, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, $1.5 billion. 20,000 properties and 40,000 vehicles were damaged during the storm with more than 25 aircraft damaged at Sydney Airport, one person was killed while fishing after getting struck by lightning and several other people were injured. It was the costliest hailstorm to hit an Australian populated city. http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/nsw/sevwx/14april1999.shtml Largest stone measured was 9.5cm.
- May 18 2000, McHenry, Lake, northern Kane, and northern Cook County, Illinois, USA, $572 million http://mesh.medill.northwestern.edu/mnschicago/archives/2006/02/stormfix_weathe.html. Golfball-, baseball-, and softball-sized hail damaged roofs, cars, patio furniture, skylights, and windows in the area's worst and most widespread hailstorm in 30 years. Around 100,000 homes lost power. Hail was 3 inches deep in many areas. There were 100 canceled flights, and train service was disrupted. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_20000519/ai_n13863575http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lot/stormdata/may2000.pdf
- April 10 2001, St. Louis, Missouri, USA, Costliest in US history, largest swath of very large hail, >$1.9 billion insured losses.
- July 19 2002, Henan Province, the People's Republic of China, 25 dead and hundreds injured.
- June 22 2003, Aurora, Nebraska, USA, Largest hailstone on record falls. It has a 7-inch diameter and a circumference of 18.75 inches.
Gallery
Hail Shaft | Small hail that has been fractured to show internal structure; 246x magnification. The inset shows the original hail. | A field littered with large hailstones right after a summer hailstorm. | |
Small transparent hail beads on the ground after a short spring storm. | Large hailstones up to 5 cm in diameter with concentric rings. The coin diameter is 21.25 mm. | Hailstorm | |
See also
References
1. ^ Weather Glossary (html). Weatherzone.
2. ^ Video accompanying entry for "hail" in Britannica Online, Academic Edition
2. ^ Video accompanying entry for "hail" in Britannica Online, Academic Edition
- Rogers and Yau (1989). A Short Course in CLOUD PHYSICS. Massachusetts: Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-3215-1.
External links
- Hail Research Information Center
- Images of hail and severe hailstorms from southwestern Germany
- Images of hail and hailstorms
- Hail factsheet
- Using sound to break up hail
- Youtube Video of large hailstorm in progress
'''
- For the frozen precipitation, see Hail
- For the city in Saudi Arabia, see Ha'il
- For the mathematical problem known as the 'hailstone problem', see Collatz conjecture
- For the "Hail Mary" prayer, see Hail Mary
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Seasons
Temperate
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Tropical
Dry
season Cool
Hot
Wet season
A season is one of the major divisions of the year, generally based on yearly periodic changes in weather.
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Temperate
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Tropical
Dry
season Cool
Hot
Wet season
A season is one of the major divisions of the year, generally based on yearly periodic changes in weather.
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temperate latitudes of the globe lie between the tropics and the polar circles. The changes in these regions between summer and winter are generally mild, rather than extreme hot or cold. However, a temperate climate can have very unpredictable weather.
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Seasons
Temperate
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Tropical
Dry
season Cool
Hot
Wet season
Spring
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Temperate
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Tropical
Dry
season Cool
Hot
Wet season
Spring
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Summer is one of the four seasons of the year. In the West, the seasons are generally considered to start at the equies and solstices, based on astronomical reckoning. In English-language calendars, based on astronomy, summer begins on the day of the summer solstice and ends on the
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storm is any disturbed state of an astronomical body's atmosphere, especially affecting its surface, and strongly implying severe weather. It may be marked by strong wind, thunder and lightning (a thunderstorm), heavy precipitation, such as ice (ice storm), or wind transporting
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thunderstorm, also called an electrical storm or lightning storm, is a form of weather characterized by the presence of lightning and its attendant thunder produced from a cumulonimbus cloud.
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tornado is a violently rotating column of air which is in contact with both a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, a cumulus cloud base and the surface of the earth. Tornadoes come in many sizes but are typically in the form of a visible condensation funnel, whose narrow end
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tropical cyclone is a meteorological term for a storm system characterized by a low pressure system center and thunderstorms that produces strong wind and flooding rain. A tropical cyclone feeds on the heat released when moist air rises and the water vapor it contains condenses.
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winter storm is a meteorological event in which the dominant varieties of precipitation are forms that only occur at cold temperatures, such as snow or sleet, or a rainstorm where ground temperatures are cold enough to allow ice to form (i.e. freezing rain).
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blizzard is a severe winter storm condition characterized by low temperatures, strong winds, and heavy blowing snow. Blizzards are formed when a high pressure system, also known as a ridge, interacts with a low pressure system; this results in the advection of air from the high
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precipitation (also known as hydrometeor) is any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that is deposited on the earth's surface. It occurs when the atmosphere (being a large gaseous solution) becomes saturated with water vapour and the water condenses and
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FOG can be an acronym for...
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- the tool "Flexible Object Generator"
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Drizzle is light precipitation consisting of liquid water drops smaller than that of rain, and generally smaller than 0.5 mm (0.02 in.) in diameter.
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Rain is a type of precipitation, a product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that is deposited on the earth's surface. It forms when separate drops of water fall to the Earth's surface from clouds.
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Freezing Rain is a type of precipitation that begins as snow at higher altitude, falling from a cloud towards earth, melts completely on its way down while passing through a layer of air above freezing temperature, and then
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Sleet is a term used in a variety of ways to describe precipitation intermediate between rain and snow but distinct from hail.
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SNOW 1.0 and 2.0 are two word-based synchronous stream ciphers developed by Thomas Johansson and Patrik Ekdahl at Lund University.
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SNOW 1.0, originally simply SNOW, was submitted to the NESSIE project.
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precipitation (also known as hydrometeor) is any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that is deposited on the earth's surface. It occurs when the atmosphere (being a large gaseous solution) becomes saturated with water vapour and the water condenses and
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