sometimes tropical hurricans hit the coast of the USA.
They form over the oceans
Hurricanes form over tropical waters and are earth's largest and most destructive storms.
The warmer earth's temperature is, the more frequent and energetic tropical storms will tend to become.
Hurricanes form over tropical waters as a result of warm ocean temperatures and favorable atmospheric conditions. They are known as earth's largest and most destructive storms, characterized by strong winds, heavy rainfall, and storm surges that can cause widespread damage and devastation.
No. Tropical storms develop over warm ocean water and don't remain tropical storms more than a couple hundred miles inland. Even then, Minnesota gets its fair share of nasty storms, including tornadoes, even if it does not get tropical storms.
Not exactly. A tropical storm is indeed a kind of storm, but not all storms are tropical storms.
Tropical storms in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the Southern Hemisphere rotate clockwise.
Tropical storms in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the Southern Hemisphere rotate clockwise.
Hurricanes and tropical storms are both named. Hurricanes have more detailed and already thought of names, while tropical storms aren't as important.
Tropical storms and hurricanes are different intensity levels of the same type of storm: a tropical cyclone. The difference is that a tropical storm has winds of 39-73 mph and a hurricane has winds of 74 mph or greater.
Tornadoes, rainstorms, tropical storms, hurricane, blizzard, tropical storm, snow storm.
No. As you might expect from the name, tropical storms do not stray too far from the tropics.