Hurricanes produce very heavy rain, enough to pose a very serious flooding risk. The rain is shredded into smaller droplest by the powerful winds and appear to move in an almost horizontal direction.
Heavy rain, often accompanied by hail, generally prececes a tornado, but often stops before the tornado hits. The tornado itself is often in a rain-free portion of a thunderstorm. However, some tornadoes are rain-wrapped. The rain can range anywhere from a drizzel to a torrential downpour that blocks the tornado from view.
A hurricane
No, a hurricane is not a tornado over water. A tornado and a hurricane are quite different. A hurricane is a large-scale self-sustaining storm pressure system, typically hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is a small-scale vortex dependent on a parent thunderstorm rarely over a mile wide. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Zero. If you are killed in a hurricane, you are already dead, so you can't be killed by a tornado.
Kansas can have tornadoes because it is in tornado ally. Kansas might have a hurricane but not as severe as coasts.
A tornado and a hurricane cannot "combine" as they operate on different scales. It is fairly common for tornadoes to produce tornadoes.
tornado,hurricane,vortex,
They can blow down old houses and its kind of like a tornado. It can take electricity out and gas so you have to be alert. Before a hurricane or a storm comes its really quiet and starts raining then the storm comes and the rain is very heavy.
It can't. A hurricane can't become a tornado.
A hurricane and a typhoon are the same strength, as they are the same type of storm only occurring in different regions. They are a kind of cyclone. Overall, a hurricane or typhoon is stronger than other varieties of cyclone. Due to their large size, such cyclone will release more energy than a tornado, but a tornado has stronger winds.
Tornadoes and hurricanes both produce low pressure.
a hurricane
Both a hurricane and a tornado have centers of intense low pressure.
If you mean a hurricane in a bottle then yes, a hurricane in a bottle and a tornado in a bottle are the same thing. In shape, however, the vortex bears more resemblance to a tornado than a hurricane.
Hurricane Blizzard Tornado Flood Earthquake
The winds in a tornado funnel are perhaps faster (and therefore more destructive) than a hurricane, but the diameter of a tornado is very very small compared with a hurricane.
No, a hurricane is a huge storm hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is tiny by comparison.
a tornado because of when it hit it it keeps going but a hurricane will stop at land