leave the place!
A hurricane with sustained winds of 122 mph would be a category 3.
get to high nearby building and go to the roof because of the national guard helicopters will see and rescue you.
There is little to no wind in the eye of a hurricane because all of the wind is circling around the eye of the hurricane. If there was wind in the middle of a hurricane, then it wouldn't really be a hurricane. It would just be a bunch of wind in one spot.
A hurricane with 190 mph would be well into the category 5 range.
No, because it is a general/nonspecific noun, however if you were naming a particular hurricane i.e. Hurricane Katrina, then a capital letter for hurricane would be needed because it is a proper noun.
Weather Caught on Camera - 2011 Hawaii Hurricane was released on: USA: 6 August 2013
Indirectly, yes. Sometimes, when people are in the eye of a hurricane they will go outside thinking the storm is over only to be caught in the winds on the other side.
A hurricane with sustained winds of 122 mph would be a category 3.
It would have to be a hurricane, as tornadoes do not have names.
if a hurricane dont ocurred
It would depend on how big the hurricane is and in what direction it is moving in.
get to high nearby building and go to the roof because of the national guard helicopters will see and rescue you.
The velocity tells you the speed of the hurricane, but also tells you the direction the hurricane is heading.
No. Hurricane Andrew was formed on the west coast of Africa, and hurricanes always travel west first, possibly hitting land, then will curve up northeast before dying out. There is no way Hurricane Andrew could travel west all the way across the Atlantic, then Mexico, then all the way across the Pacific, and hit Asia. Hurricane Andrew would have been caught by some current near the Caribbean Islands, which it was.
Only indirectly. They eye of a hurricane is calm and so many people go outside thinking the storm is over and are then caught off guard when the second half of the storm comes.
No, Hurricanes are called typhoons in the east. So in Japan a hurricane would be called a typhoon.
A hurricane with sustained winds of 129 mph would be at the upper cusp of category 3.