Tornadoes
Tornadoes can have winds over 300 mph. Tornadoes this strong are extremely rare though.
No. a typical tornado moves between 25 and 40 mph. Winds in a tornado are faster, however. Some tornadoes can produce winds in excess of 300 mph, but only within a small portion of the tornado and no single location would experience such winds for more than a few seconds. The rest of the tornado will produce significantly slower, though still very strong winds. Tornadoes this strong are very rare however. Most tornadoes have peak winds of less than 110 mph.
They cool or it gets colder
Most tornadoes have winds in the range of about 65-85 mph. The most damaging tornadoes usually have winds over 165 mph. On rare occasions winds can exceed 300 mph.
wind mills => wind power (eolian energy).
1,600 kilometers per hour is 994.19 miles per hour.
It is a measure of speed, and means that if such a speed is maintained, the object will move 10 kilometers every hour.
Neptune's winds blow about 2,000 kilometers per hour (1,243 miles perhour) which causes its great dark spot to move around the planet. Neptune's dark spot is a storm which is known to vanish and reform. I surely hop my answers helped you thank you kindly for reading this
West winds.
1 hour = 3,600 seconds 100 km/hr = (100 / 3,600) = 0.027777 km/sec = 27 and 7/9ths meters per second.
They move into the temperate regions. All of the winds are connected and the cycle goes back and forth.
Convergent winds are winds that move toward something, such as a hurricane or tornado.
Sand can only be moved by strong, steady winds. The air must be moving at least 15 miles per hour to be able to pick up sand grains. In the Tularosa basin, it is primarily between February and April that the winds are strong enough. These winds are called unidirectional winds because they always move in the same direction, from the southwest to the northeast. As the wind blows, it pushes the sand ahead of it, so individual dunes are slowly moving to the northeast.
There are 3 global winds per hemisphere, so 6 in total. The 3 global winds are the: easterlies, which move from east to west. westerlies, which move from west to east. and the trade winds, which also moves from the east to west.
Yes.
winds
There are high-speed winds in the thinner upper cloud layers, which increase in speed in the middle layers. These winds blow from west to the east. The upper winds have a speed of around 300 km/hour, and middle layer winds (the equivalent of Earth's jet streams) move at up to 700 km/hour (435 mph). But in the thicker lower layers, this slows to only a few kilometers per hour. For example, on October 23, 1975, the Soviet lander, Venera 10, measured a wind speed of 3.5 meters/second or about 8 mph at the surface.