Typhoon (s)
In the Pacific Ocean, hurricanes are referred to as typhoons in the western North Pacific and cyclones in the eastern North Pacific. Typhoons typically affect countries like Japan, China, and the Philippines, while cyclones impact areas such as Mexico and the western coast of the United States.
Storms that are similar to hurricanes are called typhoons in the western Pacific Ocean north of the equator.
It depends on 3 things.They must be tropicalThey must produce sustained winds of at least 74 mphThey must occur in the potion east of the International Date Line and north of the equatorStorms of the same type west of the date line are called typhoons and ones south of the equator are called cyclones. The only country in the world that has hurricanes on the Pacific Ocean is Mexico, no other, none, we have them all, you like everybody else have them over our gulf, The Gulf of Mexico, but we have the largest Pacific sea board in America, so we get all the storms which we always call Huricanes.
In the Far East, a hurricane is called a typhoon. Hurricanes and typhoons are types of tropical cyclones. In other regions of the world, such as the Caribbean area or parts of the North Atlantic Ocean, these storms are called hurricanes.
The hurricanes, are also know as typhoon's, but the word hurricane, is western, it comes from the ancient Olmecs, who had a wind god, called huracan, so when the Spanish saw the storm, they used the local word for it, and it is in use to this day.
No, a hurricane cannot cause a typhoon. Hurricanes and typhoons are the same weather phenomenon, but they are given different names based on the region in which they form. In the North Atlantic, central and eastern North Pacific, and South Pacific, they are called hurricanes. In the Northwest Pacific, they are called typhoons.
In the Atlantic and eastern Pacific they north of the equator are called hurricanes. In the western Pacific north of the equator they are called typhoons. In the northern Indian Ocean they are called very severe cyclonic storms.
Cyclones in the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific are called hurricanes, in the Northwest Pacific they are called typhoons, in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean they are called cyclones, and in the South Atlantic and southeastern South Pacific they are called tropical cyclones.
In the western North Pacific, hurricanes are referred to as typhoons. The terminology varies based on the region, with "hurricane" used in the Atlantic and northeastern Pacific, while "cyclone" is used in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean. Typhoons are essentially the same type of storm as hurricanes, characterized by strong winds and heavy rainfall. The classification is primarily geographic, reflecting the location where the storm occurs.
Hurricanes usually occur in the North Atlantic Ocean, the Northeast Pacific Ocean, and the Northwest Pacific Ocean. These regions are known as basins where tropical cyclones, including hurricanes, typically form.
Hey there, Most hurricanes are formed in three major areas of the Earth, the North West Pacific Ocean, the South Pacific and Indian Oceans, and the Mid Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. Hurricanes tend to be seasonal. They usually have peak times during particular months of the year, depending on where you live. And also...Hurricanes are not called hurricanes in every region of the world. In the Pacific Ocean, hurricanes are called typhoons. In the Southwest Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, hurricanes are known as cyclones.
The name varies with where they occur. In the waters of the Atlantic and eastern Pacific in the northern hemisphere such storms are called hurricanes. In the western Pacific north of the equator they are called typhoons. In the southern Pacific and Indian Oceans they are simply called cyclones.