An hurricane.
A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph. A tropical depression is a tropical cyclone with winds less than 39 mph. Above that limit it is considered a tropical storm. A tropical depression is of much lower intensity and is generally not as well organized as a hurricane.
Within a tropical cyclone the winds at lower levels are slower than those at upper levels, especially if the storm is moving onto land. At these lower speeds, the low-level winds blow more toward the center of the cyclone, while upper-level winds move in a more circular fashion. This creates wind shear, which can lead to rotation in some of the storm cells within the cyclone. This rotation can lead to the formation of tornadoes.
They are both tropical cyclones. A tropical cyclone with wind speeds less than 39 mph is a tropical depression. A tropical depression lacks the familiar shape and eye of the more severe tropical cyclones A tropical storm is a tropical cyclone has wind speeds between 39 mph and 73 mph. While it has the familiar spiral shape it does not have the well defined eye of a hurricane. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with wind speeds in excess of 74 mph.
A hurricane is a kind of cyclone, specifically an intense tropical cyclone. Generally speaking, a hurricane produces more rain than other types of cyclone.
A hurricane and typhoon are really the same thing. Only a Hurricane occurs in the Atlantic ocean or Pacific ocean east of the International Date Line. A typhoon is in the Pacific ocean west of the line. A cyclone is virtually any cyclonic (counterclockwise rotation in the northern hemisphere, clockwise in the southern hemisphere) low -pressure system and is not necessarily severe or violent. A hurricane (or typhoon) is a specific type of cyclone: a tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds of 74 mph or more.
By definition it is a hurricane. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with winds of 74 mph or more.
A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph. A tropical depression is a tropical cyclone with winds less than 39 mph. Above that limit it is considered a tropical storm. A tropical depression is of much lower intensity and is generally not as well organized as a hurricane.
Within a tropical cyclone the winds at lower levels are slower than those at upper levels, especially if the storm is moving onto land. At these lower speeds, the low-level winds blow more toward the center of the cyclone, while upper-level winds move in a more circular fashion. This creates wind shear, which can lead to rotation in some of the storm cells within the cyclone. This rotation can lead to the formation of tornadoes.
They are both tropical cyclones. A tropical cyclone with wind speeds less than 39 mph is a tropical depression. A tropical depression lacks the familiar shape and eye of the more severe tropical cyclones A tropical storm is a tropical cyclone has wind speeds between 39 mph and 73 mph. While it has the familiar spiral shape it does not have the well defined eye of a hurricane. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with wind speeds in excess of 74 mph.
Yes and no. A hurricane is a type of cyclone, but is the most powerful variety. A hurricane is defined as a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph. While a few other types of cyclone have achieved winds comparable to those of a category 1 hurricane, hurricane winds can exceed 150 mph. Only a few other types of winds event can produce such winds (such as tornadoes and microbursts), but non of those quite qualify as cyclones. Gay no one cares about this crap
Wind speeds in tornadoes and thunderstorms vary widely. EF0 tornado winds officially begin at 65 mph, but tornadoes have been rated with winds estimated as low as 55 mph. At the other end, the most violent tornadoes may produce winds over 300 mph. There is no particular winds speed for a thunderstorm. Some produce no more than a breeze. A thunderstorm is classified as severe if it produces a gust to 58 mph or more. Aside from tornadoes, thunderstorms have produced winds to over 130 mph in rare cases. A tropical depression is defined as a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of less than 39 mph.
A hurricane is a kind of cyclone, specifically an intense tropical cyclone. Generally speaking, a hurricane produces more rain than other types of cyclone.
YES!!! They are extremely low pressure systems. These other names are the ones used is different parts of the world. Hurricanes ; The Americas. Cycvlones ; Bay of Bengal (India) Typhoones ; South China Sea ( Off the coasr of China). Also ; 'Willy Willy's' ; off the northern coast of Australia. It is an aboriginal name.
A hurricane and typhoon are really the same thing. Only a Hurricane occurs in the Atlantic ocean or Pacific ocean east of the International Date Line. A typhoon is in the Pacific ocean west of the line. A cyclone is virtually any cyclonic (counterclockwise rotation in the northern hemisphere, clockwise in the southern hemisphere) low -pressure system and is not necessarily severe or violent. A hurricane (or typhoon) is a specific type of cyclone: a tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds of 74 mph or more.
Yes. A tornado is orders of magnitude smaller than a tropical cyclone. Most tornadoes are no more than a few hundred yards wide and rarely over a mile. By contrast a tropical cyclone is usually hundreds of miles wide.
A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with winds 74 miles per hour or more. A monsoon is a seasonal reversing wind with corresponding changes in precipitation. A blizzard is a severe snowstorm with strong sustained winds that last for prolonged periods of time.
A cyclone is any low-pressure system that rotates counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern hemisphere. Cyclones often bring rain or stormy, but not necessarily violent weather.A hurricane is more strictly defined as a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph that occurs in the northern hemisphere either in the Atlantic Ocean or the Pacific Ocean east of 180 degrees longitude.