False. The eye of a hurricane is calm. The strongest part of a hurricane is the eye wall.
False. The eye of a hurricane is calm. The strongest part of a hurricane is the eye wall.
No, they eye of a hurricane is calm. The strongest part of a hurricane is the eyewall, a ring of heavy rain and strong winds just outside the eye.
The strongest part of a hurricane is the eyewall, just outside the eye.
The strongest part of the hurricane is the storm surge.
No, they eye of a hurricane is calm. The strongest part of a hurricane is the eyewall, a ring of heavy rain and strong winds just outside the eye.
The strongest part of a hurricane is the eyewall. The strongest winds are usually on the right-hand side of the eyewall relative to the storm's motion.
The eyewall section of a hurricane is typically the strongest and most intense part of the storm, with the highest winds and heaviest rainfall. This is where you would find the most severe weather conditions in a hurricane.
The windy part.
The eye is the part with out the most trouble on the eye wall is the worst
No, the strongest part of a hurricane is the eye wall. The eye wall is the barrier surrounding the eye and the rest of the hurricanes. There are more fast moving winds in that area. However, th eye, the center of the hurricane, is the calmest part of the hurricane because air is pushed up and out of it, causing no fast moving air in the center.
No, the strongest part of a hurricane is the eye wall. The eye wall is the barrier surrounding the eye and the rest of the hurricanes. There are more fast moving winds in that area. However, th eye, the center of the hurricane, is the calmest part of the hurricane because air is pushed up and out of it, causing no fast moving air in the center.
Hurricane Katrina was an Atlantic hurricane. It was at its strongest over the Gulf of Mexico, which is part of the Atlantic basin.