No all tropical storms rated as Hurricanes, Cyclones or Typhoons are stronger than any normal cyclonic storm.
Hurricanes and cyclones are the same type of storm, but they are referred to differently based on their location. Hurricanes form in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific, while cyclones form in the northern Indian Ocean and Bay of Bengal. The size of a hurricane or cyclone can vary based on the specific storm and its intensity.
They are not. Tornadoes are much smaller than cyclones. A true cyclone is generally a few hundred miles across while tornadoes are rarely over a mile wide. Tornadoes are smaller because they form within individual thunderstorms while cyclones are their own weather systems.
It varies widely. Some of the smallest eyes are around two to three miles wide. A normal size eye is about 15 to 30 miles wide. A very large eye can be over 60 miles wide. Generally the stronger the hurricane the smaller the eye.
Such statements generally cannot be applied categorically, as the severity of impact of any of these events can vary widley. To start off, though, we must establish that a hurricane is a kind of cyclone, specifically an intense tropical cyclone. Hurricanes and other intense tropical cyclones such as typhoons are really the same thing. These storms are the most intense variety of cyclone and do have the most potential for death and destruction of all the events discussed here. However, not all tropical cyclones live up to their full destructive potential. Cyclones, including hurricanes, are large weather patterns that impact large areas. Mid-latitude cyclones are rarely as intense as even a minimal hurricane, but they can still have significant effects including blizzards, floods, and severe weather and tornado outbreaks. Tornadoes are a different phenomenon. They are small-scale weather events. Their effects are generally very localized, but the severity of damage in the small areas they hit is generally worse. So, while a hurricane may cause moderate damage across several states, a tornado can cause major damage limited to a single town.
Neither. A cyclone is a broad scale low pressure system with cyclonically spiraling winds. A hurricane is one variety of cyclone, but not all cyclones are hurricanes. A tornado is an entirely different type of weather phenomenon.
Hurricane Andrew, while extremely intense, was actually smaller than most hurricanes.
Hurricane is basically a huge storm that forms in water and gets stronger as it goes over water but when it goes over land it gets weaker. They eye of the hurricane is calm though. Tornado are huge gusts of wind that spirally flow and can suck people and things up. Cyclones are like hurricanes except without the thunder and rainstorms and mostly wind.
Hurricane Igor On September 19,2010 was recorded at 545 miles wide its largest point On August 27,2005 Katrina's largest point was 200 miles wide. Hurricane Katrina was 345 miles smaller than Hurricane Igor. And Igor was a Category 2 but Katrina was a Category 5.Huh.
No. Cyclones can produce tornadoes, but not the other way around. A cyclone is a large scale system that can produce smaller storm cells. A tornado is a small scale vortex that results from such a cell.
Typhoons and hurricanes are essentially the same thing, only a hurricane occurs in the Atlantic or eastern Pacific, while a typhoon is in the western Pacific. Both are classed as tropical cyclones wind winds of at least 74 mph.A cyclone is virtually any low pressure system, this includes hurricanes and typhoons, as well as other, much less severe weather systems. Cyclones are typically several hundred miles wide. A cyclones is generally an independent system that often produces a variety of weatherA tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are tiny compared with cyclones, rarely over a mile wide, though they are typically more violent. Also, unlike a cyclone a tornado is not its own weather system but is dependent on a larger parent storm.
The main families of meteorological depressions are extratropical cyclones, tropical cyclones, and mesocyclones. Extratropical cyclones are large weather systems that form outside the tropics, while tropical cyclones are intense storms that form over warm ocean waters. Mesocyclones are smaller-scale rotating updrafts typically associated with severe thunderstorms.
The wind of a tornado are in a much smaller area, usually under a mile wide. A hurricane is hundreds of miles wide.