Warm ocean water increases the supply of water vapor that the typhoon needs.
No, hurricanes get their energy from evaporation from warm ocean water.
Hurricanes begin as a collection of thunderstorms over warm ocean waters (usually in the Atlantic) known as tropical disturbances.
The ocean its temp
Katrina, like all hurricanes, got its energy from warm ocean water. Katrina in particular got most of its energy from a very warm Gulf of Mexico.
A tropical cyclone:Called a Hurricane, Typhoon, or Cyclone - depending on where it occurs. .A hurricane is a storm that occurs in the Atlantic Ocean and northeastern Pacific Ocean.A typhoon occurs in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.A cyclone occurs in the south Pacific or Indian Ocean.
Typhoons get their energy from warm, very moist air, with moisture provided by warm ocean water. As the air is drawn up into the typhoon it cools and the moisture condenses, releasing enormous amounts of energy.
A typhoon occurs when there is low barometric pressure over a warm part of the ocean. It gains wind speed and absorbs water until it reaches land.
Typhoons are powered by the huge amounts of moisture that evaporate from warm ocean water.
Over a warm area of Ocean.
A Typhoon, Hurricane or Cyclone (the name depends on which ocean they occur in but they are all the same thing).
warm ocean waters and thunderstorms
Landforms and bodies of water affect typhoons based on what or how strong the energy is released by the landforms and bodies of water. Typhoons gain energy from warm ocean water and lose energy over cold water. Particularly, landforms lessen the strength of typhoons whenever the winds impact them
Landforms and bodies of water will affect typhoons very differently. A typhoon will typically gain energy and momentum from warm ocean water and will lose energy and momentum over cold water and interactions with land.
Typhoons get their energy from warm, very moist air, with moisture provided by warm ocean water. As the air is drawn up into the typhoon it cools and the moisture condenses, releasing enormous amounts of energy.
well i dont know much but i guess it does
well i dont know much but i guess it does
No, hurricanes get their energy from evaporation from warm ocean water.