Heat of water.
me mum
christine
Hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water. When a hurricane moves over land it is cut off from its power source.
No, hurricanes get their energy from evaporation from warm ocean water.
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.
Ultimately, the source of energy for both tornadoes and hurricanes is warm, moist air.
me mum
me mum
christine
Hurricanes use the warm moist ocean air as an energy source so as soon as it hits land the moist air is no longer there. Although hurricanes lose energy over land, they still do devastating amounts of damage.
The only external source of the earth's energy is the sun. The sun controls the weather which includes hazards such as tornados, hurricanes, and sunburn
They lose there energy when the Hurricanes reach land because the sea is there food and energy. when the hurricanes reach land it destroys thinks in its path and dies.
Hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water. When a hurricane moves over land it is cut off from its power source.
Hurricanes gain strength from the warmth of the ocean water.
Hurricanes get their energy from moist air. They originate in over oceans as the water evaporates. Hurricanes eventually die out when they travel over land or cooler waters, where their water vapor source is cut off to fuel the storm.
Hurricanes get the energy they need from the moisture that evaporates from warm ocean water. Without this energy source a hurricane weakens and dissipates.
No, hurricanes get their energy from evaporation from warm ocean water.