The two types of air that combined are hot/warm and humid air.
Hurricane Sandy's winds formed by the Sun heating air and that air convecting.
No. Storm debris is not a form of air pollution.
air temperature water temperature wind
A hurricane is a low pressure system that pulls air into it, primarily a low levels. However, a hurricane does nto form by pulling in other storms. Rather, a hurricane primarily pulls in warm, moist air. This air acts as fuel, allowing more storm cells to develop within the hurricane.
The most intense Atlantic hurricane on record was Hurricane Wilma of 2005 with a minimum central pressure of 882 millibars.
Hurricane Sandy's winds formed by the Sun heating air and that air convecting.
No; a hurricane consists of air and water.
They combine in the air to form acid precipitation
Rising, expanding and cooling.
No. Storm debris is not a form of air pollution.
Acid Rain
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
air temperature water temperature wind
A hurricane is a low pressure system that pulls air into it, primarily a low levels. However, a hurricane does nto form by pulling in other storms. Rather, a hurricane primarily pulls in warm, moist air. This air acts as fuel, allowing more storm cells to develop within the hurricane.
Hurricanes form when there is a layer of cold air above a layer of warm air. The warm air wants to go up the cold air wants to go down. When there is a finger of hot air rising a complimentary finger of cold air will descend - this is what a hurricane is. When ever you have something falling from a great height you have a drastic release of energy. This is the energy of the hurricane. In the broadest sense the energy comes from the sun that heated the low lying air that favoured the warm/cold transfer, this is the energy that raises the warm air to a higher elevation. It is the energy released when the cold air falls that the hurricane is mostly known for.
No, there is plenty of air (and air pressure) in a hurricane, and plenty of other ways to die in a hurricane.
A chemical change is when one or more objects combine to form a new object. For example, an iron nail can combine with the oxygen in the air to form iron oxide, or rust.