They gain power and energy.
Tropical cyclones have tremendous amounts of energy. As the storms move, they release the energy in high winds and rain. Most cyclones have the destructive energy of several nuclear weapons.
The energy source for storm is cyclones.
Heat energy from the Earth's surface (usually from sunlight) causes the convection cycle that creates thunderstorms and cyclones. Cyclones and tropical storms get their energy from warm tropical waters, and are part of the process that transfers heat from the warmer tropics to the cooler higher latitudes.
No. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone.
The term cyclone refers to a wide variety of weather phenomena. Many cyclones are not particularly violent, though tropical cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons) generally are. Generally speaking tornadoes are more violent than cyclones but cyclones cover a much larger area and so release much more energy.
Increases in the earth's temperature from global warming are putting extra heat into the oceans and atmosphere. Storms and cyclones need energy and this heat is extra energy which is expended in storms.
They gain energy by eating food.
Generally power is expressed in watts. The gain is the ratio of the output power to the input power. Gain = (output power)/(input power) if the gain is expressed in terms of log(base10) it is known as Decibel power gain Decibel power gain = Log10(Gain)dB if 1milliwatt power is taken as reference then Decibel power gain = Log10(Output power/1 milliwatt)dBm
Cyclones require, some amount of Coriolis force in order to gain their rotation. This effect is strongest at the poles and zero at the equator. Within 5 degrees of the equator, the effect is too weak for cyclones to organize.
It created energy to power the city...like when you live by a river, your house can use the movement of the water to gain energy, thus creating power to power factories in the 1800's.
No, objects that gain energy become hotter.