cause the weather is strong andd their is no way that something possbliy that can touch that right but i think that why do they turn toward cause of the weather
No. In the northern hemisphere tornadoes an hurricanes both turn counterclockwise apart from a very small percentage of tornadoes. They turn clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
She was the princess of Akkadia, which was the northern part of Babylonia, which in turn was the southern part of Mesopotamia.
It is a hurricane that forms under the equater. In the northern hemisphere hurricanes turn counter-clockwise. They are called Typhoons in the southern hemisphere and recently a Hurricane was seen to cross the equator which is very worrying for our future climate.
Hurricanes are in a class of storm called tropical cyclones. Such storms rotate counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern. In a strict sense, the term hurricane is only applied to tropical cyclones in parts of the northern hemisphere, so they do rotate counterclockwise.
The most common path is to initially move westward and then turn north and sometimes east to strike either the Gulf Coast or the southern Atlantic Coast.
Winds in the Southern Hemisphere generally turn clockwise due to the Coriolis effect, which is the deflection of moving objects to the right in the Southern Hemisphere caused by the Earth's rotation. This means that winds tend to flow in a clockwise direction around high-pressure systems and in a counterclockwise direction around low-pressure systems.
The most common path for hurricanes that strike the US is generally from the Atlantic Ocean or Gulf of Mexico, moving westward towards the East Coast or Gulf Coast states. These storms can make landfall anywhere from Texas to Maine, with Florida being one of the most frequently impacted states.
Sustained winds in a hurricane are at least 74 mph. Some hurricanes have had winds as high as 190 mph.
Sort of. Pulling air inward and the formation of a circulation are necessary for a hurricane to develop, but they are also consequences of the low pressure area that is the precursor of a hurricane, which is powered by warm, moist air.
They are called hurricanes, or whatever the translation is in the language of the country of interest, However, actual hurricanes are very rare in Europe, though other storms may produce hurricane or near hurricane force winds.
No. Tornadoes are not driven by heat from the ocean. Hurricanes, however are. You could say that hurricanes turn heat from the ocean into wind, though the real explanation is a bit more complicated.
Hurricanes only affect extreme southern California, and then rarely. The peninsula of Baja California, part of Mexico, experiences storms that form along the coast of Central America, in warm tropical waters. Some storms are created by Caribbean hurricanes that struggle across the mountainous terrain and reform in the Pacific. These storms follow the warm currents along the Mexican coast, and sometimes turn east and make landfall there. Other storms continue out into the Pacific toward Hawaii.