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.
The ultimate source of a typhoon's energy is the warm ocean water. As the ocean surface heats up, it evaporates water into the atmosphere, providing the necessary moisture and heat to fuel the development of a typhoon.
Warm ocean water increases the supply of water vapor that the typhoon needs.
the way a typhoon or hurricane gets its name is by going through the alphabet and switching between girl and boy names. For example if one was named Alan then the next would be Bethany and then Carl and then Diana or something.
Both a typhoon and a volcanic eruption are natural disasters that can release large amounts of energy. Beyond that they are completely different.
The next typhoon after Typhoon Auring in the Philippines would be named Typhoon Bising.
typhoon
Typhoons are powered by the huge amounts of moisture that evaporate from warm ocean water.
There are many factors involved in typhoon formation. When large amounts of heat energy collide with an unstable atmosphere, Coriolis force, upper atmosphere divergence, or a moist mid-atmosphere a typhoon forms.
A typhoon - is a rotating storm similar to a hurricane. A flood - us simply excess water that cannot be carried away by a river system - and can be caused by various events.
The body gets its energy when you respire. Respiration is an energy release inside a cell
Typhoon originates in the Greek for their monster Typhoon the storm giant.
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