In the center of the hurricane is the eye. That winds rise s up and when your in the eye, You don't get harmed. The eye is always calm.
No, the air does not sink in a hurricane. In fact, it rises rapidly due to the low pressure at the center of the storm. This rising air creates the powerful updrafts that fuel the hurricane's strong winds and intense rainfall.
The cool air will sink and the warm air will rise.
Winds move toward the center of a hurricane because of the low pressure generated by the upward motion of the air inside it.
Differing air temperature causing cold air to sink, and warm air to rise is the main cause of air movement.
As a hurricane intensifies the winds spin so fast that they cannot reach all the way to the center, making that area clam. However, the low pressure in the eye still exerts a pull on the air. In this case air that has just reached the top of the storm gets pulled back down in the center. As this air descends it warms up, which causes the clouds in the center to dissipate.
No, the air does not sink in a hurricane. In fact, it rises rapidly due to the low pressure at the center of the storm. This rising air creates the powerful updrafts that fuel the hurricane's strong winds and intense rainfall.
rise
Air pressure decreases at the center (eye) of a hurricane
It tends to rise because it is warm air
the hot air will rise and the cool air will sink
The cool air will sink and the warm air will rise.
If an object has air in it than no it will not sink in water because air is less dense than water so it will rise in water.
They rise to the surface when air is pumped IN. They sink when air is let out
The tendency for warm air to rise and cool air to sink results in convection currents. As warm air rises, it cools and then sinks back down in a continuous loop, creating circulation patterns in the atmosphere. This process helps distribute heat and moisture around the Earth.
No air or any form of gas will always rise to the surface (as a bubble)
cold air sinks as denser - warm air rises
No. Air pressure decreases.