nothing will unless inside shelter
Whether or not a plastic shed is safe in a hurricane depends on the strength of the hurricane, the distance from the hurricane, and how sturdy the shed is. If the shed is in the path of a category 5 hurricane, it probably will be destroyed. If it is in the path of a category 1 hurricane, it may survive. It is not recommended to be inside a plastic shed during any type of hurricane. If a category 5 hurricane is approaching, it is best to evacuate, as nothing is really safe.
You might think it won't survive but thimk again That thing is 1 ton
At peak strength Sandy was a category 2 hurricane but had weaken to category 1 strenth at landfall in the U.S.
There is no such thing as a category 6 hurricane. Any hurricane with sustained winds over 156 mph is a category 5.
sunlight,carbon minoxide, and water
Hurricane Tanya was a category 1.
Hurricane Chris of 2012 was a category 1 hurricane.
Hurricane Hanna is categorized as a Category 1 hurricane, which means it has sustained winds of 74-95 mph.
no
It was a category 1 hurricane.
a living thing needs 1. water 2. food/nutrients 3. shelter 4. sun to survive
C(7,2)*(.9)^5*(.1)^2, or about .124 = 12.4% For the desired outcome, considering the seven patients, you need: (Survive,Survive,Survive,Survive,Survive,Die,Die) (Survive,Survive,Survive,Survive,Die,Survive,Die) (Survive,Survive,Survive,Die,Survive,Survive,Die) . . . (Die,Die,Survive,Survive,Survive,Survive,Survive) There are C(7,2) [the number of combinations of 7 things taken 2 at a time] = 21 possible desired outcomes. The probability of each of these outcomes is (.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.1)*(.1). Multiplying 21 by (.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.9)*(.1)*(.1) yields the answer.