Lightning does occur with hurricanes, but it is mostly in the outer bands. There is very little lightning in the eye wall.
Yes, Hurricane Katrina and its remnants produced 62 confirmed tornadoes.
Yes, it is the most dangerous part of a hurricane.
You make a hurricane then zap the pygmies with lightning while they are floating in the hurricane.
there are multiple as well as lightning
Almost any weather formation (hurricane, tornado, cloud) is capable of forming lightning due to the massive amounts of friction between the clouds in the sky. Lightning is sort of like an exponentially increased in size case of static electricity.
No, lightning and hurricanes are not the same. Lightning is a sudden electrostatic discharge occurring during a thunderstorm, while a hurricane is a large tropical storm system characterized by strong winds and heavy rainfall. Lightning is a specific weather phenomenon that can occur during a storm, whereas a hurricane is a larger storm system with defined characteristics.
There can be, but it is not a requirement for one. Search google for tornado lightning and look through the images to see.
The primary safety hazard of lightning is being struck by lightning. Other hazards include:being struck by something that has been struck by lightning or damaged by accompanying windsbeing carried away or drowned by flooding that often accompany severe lightening storms.
high winds, floods , tropical storms , lightning, thunde , ect.
Yes they do, but it is not very common, especially in the eye/wall area.Find out more about why lightning is not common in hurricanes by clicking the related link below.Yes. Hurricanes produce lightning but not as much as ordinary storms. Most of the lightning is in the outer bands.
Yes, in fact it is fairly common for landfalling hurricanes to produce tornadoes. Often times on the northeast side of a hurricane (in northern hemisphere) there will be small tornadoes embedded within the rain bands. A perfect example is across South Carolina on Sept 7, 2004. Hurricane Frances hit along the gulf coast and moved up through Georgia. South Carolina got on the northeast side of the hurricane and over 40 tornadoes touched down in the state on that day directly caused by the outter rain bands of Hurricane Frances.
Lightning.