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A hovercraft is good against a tsunami. It can go faster than a tsunami no matter how big it's waves are.
The energy source of tsunami waves is much greater The energy source of Tsunami waves is much greater
A tsunami is a reaction to an under water earthquake, land slide or a meteor that struck the earth. It's the dispersion of energy.
The energy from the plate movement travels through the water. The tsunami is just the resulting wave.
There are tsunamis and there are tsunami trains. A tsunami is generated by an underwater earthquake. A new tsunami has to wait for a new earthquake. It is not uncommon for any earthquake to be followed by one or more aftershocks within a matter of hours or days, so a new tsunami can result similarly. Since earthquake behavior is notoriously unpredictable, so is tsunami generation. A single tsunami results in a series of waves with periods ranging from minutes to hours. This is called the tsunami "wave train". There is more information in the related links.
A tsunami will stop when it runs out of energy.
A hovercraft is good against a tsunami. It can go faster than a tsunami no matter how big it's waves are.
A tsunami requires a lot of energy to produce. Tremors do not have enough force to bring about a tsunami.
yes
The energy source of tsunami waves is much greater The energy source of Tsunami waves is much greater
What you're probably thinking of is the ML scale which measures "potential energy" of the tsunami. Don't get this confused with electrical potential (or voltage). they are not the same. the "potential energy" of a tsunami, I would assume, would be measured in joules.
Yes
A tsunami wave is a wave of energy that travels through water, while a seismic wave is a wave of energy that travels through earth.
A tsunami wave is a wave of energy that travels through water, while a seismic wave is a wave of energy that travels through earth.
A tsunami is stronger, buth in terms of energy released and destructive potential. Both can cause total devstation, but a tsunami can do so over a muchlarger area.
No. tsunamis are too rare and too powerful to use for energy.
A tsunami is a reaction to an under water earthquake, land slide or a meteor that struck the earth. It's the dispersion of energy.