No. Rain in a hurricane is fresh water just like it is in other storms.
The coast should get some rain bands, but it won't be anything serious.
I heard that one time a hurricane in the Caribbean's rain band reached Alaska. So that's probably like 2000 miles.
In addition to the U.S. Hurricane Sandy made direct hits on Jamaica, Cuba, and the Bahamas. The outer rain bands had significant impacts on Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Strong winds, rain, and even a small tornado struck Bermuda. Parts of Canada were affected by the outer wind bands of Sandy as well.
The rain from a hurricane can cause sever flooding.
I think it would be rain.... -__-
This part of the storm is referred to as the rain bands.
hurricane
These lines are called rain bands.
No. Rain in a hurricane is fresh water just like it is in other storms.
The three parts of the hurricane are: *The Eye- innermost portion of the storm. *The Eye Wall- dense wall of thunderstorms directly surrounding the eye. *The Spiral Rain Bands- bands of thunderstorms spiraling outwards.
The spiral bands of a hurricanes are relatively narrow areas of heavy rain that spiral into the eye wall of a hurricane. Rain between these bands is lighter.
The eye of the hurricane is the center of calm where the winds are not strong, and sometimes provides a false sense of security. The wind and rain bands are centered outside of the eye of the hurricane.
Parts of a hurricane include: 1. Eye 2. eye Wall 3. Rainbands 4. Large Waves 5. High Winds 6. Strong Currents Hurricanes can cause flooding, injury, deaths, tornados, extremly severe thunder Storms.
The east coast of the US is only slightly affect by some rain bands.
The coast should get some rain bands, but it won't be anything serious.
No. Hurricanes and tornadoes operate on completely different scales, so they can't exactly collide. However, it is not uncommon for tornadoes to form in the outer rain bands of a hurricane.