The fastest spinning part of a hurricane is the eye wall.
The main difference is that a hurricane that hits Florida spins counterclockwise while a hurricane that hits Australia (called a cyclone in that part of the world) spins clockwise.
the fastest winds recorded in a hurricane were 190 mph in Hurricane Camille.
The fastest sustained hurricane winds on record were 190 mph. On gust was recorded to 253 mph.
Hurricane is a noun.
the eye of the hurricane
The Equatorial Region.
The main difference is that a hurricane that hits Florida spins counterclockwise while a hurricane that hits Australia (called a cyclone in that part of the world) spins clockwise.
the fastest winds recorded in a hurricane were 190 mph in Hurricane Camille.
The eye-wall is the fiercest part of a hurricane. The actual eye is very calm, but the wall has the fastest winds. The eye-wall is made of very severe storms.
Katrina
The fastest winds in a hurricane are in the eyewall, a ring shaped area of intense convention just outside the eye.
The fastest winds and heaviest rain in a hurricane are found in the eyewall, and area just outside the eye.
The hurricane spins counterclockwise due to the Coriolis force In the north if Canada was in the south it would spin clockwise. this happens because as the earth spins it veers the winds in the north west and in the south east
The outside of the tornado goes the fastest. When you start to move towards the middle of the tornado, the calmer it gets. The eye of the tornado doesn't even move.
190 mph
The most intense part of a hurricane is the eye wall.
The fastest sustained hurricane winds on record were 190 mph. On gust was recorded to 253 mph.