Sustained winds in a hurricane are at least 74 mph. Some hurricanes have had winds as high as 190 mph.
they spin and move fast
because it does haha!
No. In the northern hemisphere tornadoes an hurricanes both turn counterclockwise apart from a very small percentage of tornadoes. They turn clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
A fast twisting funnel associated with hurricanes is called a tornado. These can often form in the outer bands of a hurricane, particularly in the right front quadrant. Tornadoes in hurricanes can bring additional damaging winds and further intensify the impact of the storm.
A typhoon rotates cyclonically, just like tornadoes and hurricanes.
No. Tornadoes are not driven by heat from the ocean. Hurricanes, however are. You could say that hurricanes turn heat from the ocean into wind, though the real explanation is a bit more complicated.
Both hurricanes and tornadoes produces very fast winds. As to which one has faster winds, it varies. Some tornadoes have faster winds than others and a tornado will vary in intensity during its existence. The same is true of hurricanes. In most cases the wind speeds in a tornado and in a hurricane will fall into the same range. In the most extremely cases, though, the strongest tornadoes produce faster winds than the strongest hurricanes.
Turn on your TV tonight and watch the news. You will see the after effects of a hurricane.
the computer tells you when it hit and where it is and how fast its going
The Caribbean Sea, between Cuba and South America, is the eventual destination of many Atlantic hurricanes. Some will turn north from the Caribbean and enter the Gulf of Mexico.
Helsinki Finland?! It does not get hurricanes so far north and inland...
the cause of a hurricane is when hot water and air turn in to a cirler motion and the effect is unknowen