Generally speaking the greater the depth of the warm water, the stronger the hurricane can get. Is is because a greater depth means a greater volume of warm water to supply energy for a hurricane.
no vegetation and erosion
The rate of weathering also depends on the surface area that is exposed. Mechanical weathering breaks rocks into smaller pieces. As the pieces get smaller, their surface area increases. When this happens, there is more total surface area available for chemical weathering. The result is that weathering has more of an effort on smaller particles.
As the depth increases, the density increases also.
The storm surge, which is a sort of bulge that a hurricane creates on the ocean surface.
Out at sea, a hurricane churns just the surface of the ocean. Fish that live near the surface do feel a little turbulence, but research suggests that they may avoid the washing-machine motion by swimming a little deeper. In general, a hurricane is no big deal for a fish out at sea
There is no direct relationship.
no
the difference between this is that surface area
Yes, it is.
simple- underground and surface water ,both are the water only
scale
No. The strength of surface gravity on a planet depends on its size and mass.
It means The relationship between distance on a map and on the earth's surface.
Antarctica covers about 10% of the earth's surface.
The more uneven the surface, the more friction there is.
as we know the relation between surface tension and temperature is inverse, and that of temperature and density also has inverse proportion, then it is clear that the '''surface tension is directly proportion to the density'''.
No. Pressure in the eye of a hurricane is low.