Cyclones can have devastating effects on humans, including loss of life, displacement, and destruction of property and infrastructure. They often lead to severe flooding, landslides, and widespread damage to essential services like electricity and water supply. Additionally, the aftermath can result in long-term health issues, economic hardship, and psychological trauma for affected populations. Recovery efforts can be complicated and prolonged, impacting communities for years.
Typhoons
By slowing down the earths rotation but will not make effect to humans .
There is flooding, that kills the most people, the wind can bring trees down and they can also make tornadoes
lithosphere: coastal erosion, buildings destroyed hydrosphere: causing big waves in the ocean, unsettled waters (lakes, rivers etc.) atmosphere: disasterous winds, basically anything to do with wind actually... biosphere: death of animals/people, death of trees, crops etc.
Humans would die of cold. A little carbon dioxide keeps the earth warm, through the greenhouse effect.
cyclones are huge waves that flood the water :) By Indistop
cyclones effect mostly people in the southern hemisphere because people in the northern hemisphere call them hurricanes
it can cause temperature changes
Humans don't cause cyclones. They are a natural event. There have been proposals that global warming as a result of human greenhouse emissions would increase the frequency or intensity of cyclone, but that still wouldn't mean humans are directly causing cyclones.
Cyclones can destroy habitat for animals. They can also destroy housing, food, and water sources for people. Cyclones can bring in new plant species by carrying seeds in the wind.
the Coriolis effect
Coriolis Effect
They do not have effect on humans whatso ever.
Humans impact cyclones primarily through climate change, which is driven by greenhouse gas emissions from activities like burning fossil fuels and deforestation. This warming of the atmosphere and oceans can lead to more intense and potentially more frequent cyclones, as warmer waters provide more energy for storm development. Additionally, urbanization and land-use changes can exacerbate the effects of cyclones, increasing vulnerability and damage in affected areas. However, while human activity influences the intensity and frequency of cyclones, it does not directly cause their formation.
The rotation of a large-scale weather system depends on the Coriolis effect, in which moving air is deflected relative to earth's surface. This effect is strongest near the poles and diminishes to zero at the equator. Since this effect is weak at the lowest latitudes, tropical storms generally cannot organize within 5 degrees of the equator.
Cyclones do not typically form on the equator because the Coriolis force is weakest at the equator, making it harder for cyclonic circulation to develop. However, cyclones can form near the equator in special circumstances when other factors, such as high sea surface temperatures and a pre-existing disturbance, are present.
There would be no discernible physical effect on humans.