Moisture evaporates from the water. The resulting warm moist air carries enormous amounts of energy. When this air is pulled into a developing hurricane it rises and as a result cools and condenses, releasing that energy.
Energy of a warm sea is transferred to a hurricane by water evaporating into a hurricane.
No. Hurricanes get their power from warm water. Remember: heat is energy.
Hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water. When a hurricane moves over land it is cut off from its power source.
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.
Hurricanes gain their energy from moisture that evaporates from warm ocean water. The water of the Caribbean is warm enough to sustain a hurricane. The water off the coast of New York is not.
The strength of the hurricane would decrease, as hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water.
hurricane
Generally speaking the greater the depth of the warm water, the stronger the hurricane can get. Is is because a greater depth means a greater volume of warm water to supply energy for a hurricane.
No. Hurricanes get their power from warm water. Remember: heat is energy.
It gets its energy from warm water.
Hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water. When a hurricane moves over land it is cut off from its power source.
The energy that fuels a hurricane comes from latent heat stored in water vapor that evaporates from warm ocean water.
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.
Hurricanes gain their energy from moisture that evaporates from warm ocean water. The water of the Caribbean is warm enough to sustain a hurricane. The water off the coast of New York is not.
The strength of the hurricane would decrease, as hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water.
Because the hurricane gets its energy from the heat in warm water, and in cooler water there is less heat and thus less energy
It will normally strengthen. The evaporation from very warm water provides the energy source for hurricanes and other tropical cyclones.
Hurricanes get the energy they need from the moisture that evaporates from warm ocean water. Without this energy source a hurricane weakens and dissipates.