Want this question answered?
North America does not have record of their highest wind speed available to the public. However, the highest wind speed ever recorded anywhere was during Tropical Storm Olivia in Australia. Top speeds reached 203 miles per hour.
A typhoon starts when a storm is magnified by warm tropical or sub-tropical ocean water. As the storm draws moisture from the water, the heat increases winds and speeds the rotation of the storm.
Bobby the goat
Wind speed is the speed of the wind (in knots) relative to the environment, where as air speed is the speed of the aircraft in the air.
A storm surge is a mass of water that is pushed on land by the winds of a large, powerful storm such as a hurricane. A tidal bore is a wave that travels up a river, bay or inlet produce by an incoming high tide.
Of these, tornadoes have the shortest duration.
jesus calms the storm
North America does not have record of their highest wind speed available to the public. However, the highest wind speed ever recorded anywhere was during Tropical Storm Olivia in Australia. Top speeds reached 203 miles per hour.
the eye if the storm and the outer band wind speeds.
TornadoesThe most violent short-lived storms are tornados. Hurricanes have lower wind speeds - but can last much longer.
Hurricanes and tornadoes.
Hurricane Wilma, the 23rd storm of the record breaking hurricane season of 2005, won the award of strengthening the fastest from a tropical storm (40 mph to 74) to a category 5 hurricane (the highest category with winds of 155+) and also won the award of containing the highest wind speeds in a hurricane (185 mph). If you didn't experience this hurricane, just say thank you you never were in this monster.
A typhoon starts when a storm is magnified by warm tropical or sub-tropical ocean water. As the storm draws moisture from the water, the heat increases winds and speeds the rotation of the storm.
A tropical storm with winds of 120 km/h (75 mph) or greater is called a hurricane.
500K Storm Cat in 2002
The ice storm of 2007
The only type of storm that can achieve such winds is a tornado, and even for a tornado such strong winds are very rare.