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The US gulf coast and southern Atlantic coast border warm water from the tropics. This warm water provides the energy that power hurricanes. Storm clusters that often roll off the coast of Africa serve as "seeds" that grow into hurricanes when they encounter this energy source.
the water is to cold
Hurricanes do not form in Barbados, but they can strike there. Hurricanes develop from clusters of thunderstorms over warm ocean water. These clusters gain energy from the moisture that evaporates from the warm water and can organize and intensify to become hurricanes. Large-scale wind patterns then direct how these hurricanes move. Some of the resulting paths go across Barbados. Many of the hurricanes that affect Barbados and surrounding areas starts as disturbances that move off the west coast of Africa.
Hurricanes generally strike the U.S. on the Gulf Coast and the southern Atlantic coast. This is because hurricanes are a tropical phenomenon that can only develop over warm ocean water. This warm water provides the moisture that fuels hurricanes. Cold water or land cannot provide enough moisture. The waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Gulf Stream are generally warm enough to support hurricanes but further north they are too cold. Few hurricanes that stray that far north maintain hurricane strength. The waters off the west coast of the U.S. are similarly too cold for hurricanes.
For two reasons. First, hurricanes tend to travel westward, so Pacific hurricanes will general travel away from the U.S. Additionally, there are cold ocean currents off the U.S. west coast, which tends to suppress hurricanes. By contrast the ocean water along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts is much water, which is ideal for hurricanes.
Hurricanes gain their energy from warm ocean water. The water off the U.S. Atlantic coast is warmer than the water off the Pacific coast
The US gulf coast and southern Atlantic coast border warm water from the tropics. This warm water provides the energy that power hurricanes. Storm clusters that often roll off the coast of Africa serve as "seeds" that grow into hurricanes when they encounter this energy source.
the water is to cold
Hurricanes do not form in Barbados, but they can strike there. Hurricanes develop from clusters of thunderstorms over warm ocean water. These clusters gain energy from the moisture that evaporates from the warm water and can organize and intensify to become hurricanes. Large-scale wind patterns then direct how these hurricanes move. Some of the resulting paths go across Barbados. Many of the hurricanes that affect Barbados and surrounding areas starts as disturbances that move off the west coast of Africa.
Hurricanes generally strike the U.S. on the Gulf Coast and the southern Atlantic coast. This is because hurricanes are a tropical phenomenon that can only develop over warm ocean water. This warm water provides the moisture that fuels hurricanes. Cold water or land cannot provide enough moisture. The waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Gulf Stream are generally warm enough to support hurricanes but further north they are too cold. Few hurricanes that stray that far north maintain hurricane strength. The waters off the west coast of the U.S. are similarly too cold for hurricanes.
For two reasons. First, hurricanes tend to travel westward, so Pacific hurricanes will general travel away from the U.S. Additionally, there are cold ocean currents off the U.S. west coast, which tends to suppress hurricanes. By contrast the ocean water along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts is much water, which is ideal for hurricanes.
No actual hurricanes have hit the U.S. west coast, though hurricane remnants have. This is because of cold ocean currents in the region. Hurricanes require warm water to maintain their strength and will degenerate over cold water.
Hurricanes are tropical cyclones, meaning they can only form over warm ocean water. If they leave warm water they lose the characteristics that make them hurricanes. The waters off the coast of Alaska are far too cold to support hurricanes.
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.
The US gulf coast and southern Atlantic coast border warm water from the tropics. This warm water provides the energy that power hurricanes. This energy comes from water vapor that evaporates from the warm water. Storm clusters that often roll off the coast of Africa serve as "seeds" that grow into hurricanes when they encounter this energy source. Hurricanes are cut off from this source of moisture once they hit land and rapidly lose strength. So hurricanes lose hurricane status before they can get very far inland. The waters of the Pacific and northern Atlantic coasts are too cold to support hurricanes.
Hurricanes form over warm ocean water in or near the tropics. One of the main places where Atlantic hurricanes originate is off the west coast of Africa.
Hurricanes gain energy from warm ocean water. The Gulf Stream, a warm ocean current, allows hurricanes to develop and maintain their intensity as the move off the souhteastern coast.