No. Hurricane Katrina dissipated in 2005 and will never return. Hurricane Sandy occurred seven years after Katrina and is a completely different storm.
Hurricane Sandy did have the wides gale diameter of any Atlantic hurricane, though a few Pacific typhoons have been bigger. Note that largest is not the same thing as strongest.
There were a few reasons. First, Hurricane Sandy made a direct impact on a region not accustomed to storms of that magnitude. Second, Sandy was a very unusual storm in a number of ways, including its unprecedented westward turn. Third, that same region had been impacted by Hurricane Irene the previous year. Irene was a damaging storm, but was not quite as bad in the northeast region as had been expected. As a result, many dismissed the dire warnings about Hurricane Sandy as exaggeration.
No. hurricanes have classifications from 1-5 (i think). thunderstorms are just rain with lightning
Tropical Storm Sandy became a hurricane in the same way as any other. The storm drew in moist air that was present due to warm ocean water. This moist air provided energy that strengthened the convection within the storm, causing the pressure to drop and pull air in with even grater force, which increased wind speeds. When those speeds reached 74 mph Sandy became a hurricane.
Hurricane Sandy produced a storm surge for the same reason that all other landfalling hurricanes do. The large area of strong winds from a hurricane essentially pushes the seawater onto land. Although other hurricanes have had far stronger winds than Sandy, that storm's extremely large wind field produced a high storm surge, which was made even worse as it was funnel up Long Island Sound.
While it is unlikely for a flood and a hurricane to occur simultaneously in the exact same location, they can both impact the same area. Hurricanes can bring heavy rainfall that leads to flooding, especially in low-lying coastal regions. The flood risk is often highest after the hurricane has made landfall and as rain continues to fall.
Some words that have the same short a vowel sound as 'sandy' are man, hand, and back. Also the word 'candy' which not only has the same short a vowel sound, but it rhymes with 'sandy' too. Not that it would be handy if you got your candy sandy.
Both Irene and Sandy were destructive hurricanes that had major impacts on the U.S. east coast. They both followed similar paths, passing though the Caribbean, and moving north through the Bahamas and up the U.S. East Coast. With costs in the billions of dollars they are among the most destructive hurricanes in U.S. history.
The Hurricane mainly stays on water.
I was wondering the same thing myself! I have to do homework for school on this topic so i was researching this as well. i will be on the lookout for news stories about it and if i find any good ones ill post them on here!
Yes, the Lamborghini Hurricane the successor and that of the Gallardo engines are the same.