It weakens
The Hurricane will weaken.
No. Hurricanes form best when the water is warm. Cold water actually weakens them.
A hurricane move over the water rather than taking the water with it. That is why they weaken when they move over an area of cold water.
warm front rises on top of the cold front.
Hurricanes need warm ocean water to maintain their strength, and the waters of the U.S. west coast are cold. Any hurricane that moves over those waters will not remain a hurricane for long.
A hurricane will weaken if it moves over cold water.
The Hurricane will weaken.
No, warm water fuels a hurricane
the cold water moves down.
No. Hurricanes form best when the water is warm. Cold water actually weakens them.
A hurricane becomes a tropical storm when it weakens until its winds drop below 74 mph. This can happen if a hurricane moves over land or cold water, encounters wind shear, or pulls in dry air.
the warm air rises up and moves over the cold air that is already there.
A hurricane move over the water rather than taking the water with it. That is why they weaken when they move over an area of cold water.
hurricane or tornaro
The temperature decreases.
A hurricane needs warm water to exist so if it moves over land (especially mountains) it loses its power source and loses strength (generally pretty quickly, unless it is able to get back over water). The same goes if it moves over cold water (or stays in the same area of ocean for too long, because it mixes up the water and brings cold water to the surface).
Warm water of course.