Cyclones
A rapidly revolving item is called a "spinning" object. Examples include a spinning top, carousel, or rotating blade.
Example: Snow doesn't fall in the summer for the same reason.In Fall, the Northern Hemisphere is growing colder than the Southern Hemisphere. Hurricanes form north of the equator because they are the process of water vapor cooling to form rainclouds, as condensation turns gas into liquid.The hurricane requires energy in the form of heat and high pressure to fuel the storm and continue sucking more water from the ocean or bodies of water. The hot, heavy air around the tropical storm is sucked in by the cool, low pressure rainclouds.So the actual change from Summer to Fall in the Northern Hemisphere is what fuels the hurricane. Everything south of the Equator - which divides the world in half - is growing warmer and heavier from the heat of the sun.Hurricanes suck up all the warm, heavy water vapor left in the Northern Hemisphere that it can before the storm cools off and all the water turns into rain or ice, by equalizing the storm's temperature and pressure with the atmosphere.This is why a tropical storm can become a category 5 hurricane. It begins to gain momentum from water vapor in the ocean cooling rapidly as the seasons start to change. If it doesn't suck up enough hot air to cool it down before reaching land, the tropical storm won't become a hurricane.Q: Why can't a hurricane pass from the Southern Hemisphere to the Northern Hemisphere?A: The Southern Hemisphere is growing warmer than the Northern Hemisphere during hurricane season, so the water vapor in the Southern Hemisphere no longer has a chance to cool off, and form a low pressure rainstorm. The Equator acts like a high pressure blanket while the sun heats up the southern half of the earth and the north cools and condenses water vapor into rain.Keep in mind, all of what I just wrote is memory and logic from high school environmental science class. I might have made a mistake. This was fun to write though, it got me thinking after not being in school for 2 years!!
Actually, the nearly perfect spherical shape of the moon is more attributed to its own gravity pulling it into a round shape, rather than its rotation speed. The moon's rotation is tidally locked with Earth, so it rotates at the same rate it orbits, which is why we always see the same side of the moon facing us.
Jupiter's degree of flattening indicates that it is not a perfect sphere, suggesting that the planet rotates rapidly. This spin causes the equator to bulge out and the poles to flatten, giving a clue about its internal structure and composition.
Jupiter's wind speeds can reach up to 384 miles per hour (618 kilometers per hour) in its rapidly spinning atmosphere. The planet's powerful jet streams and chaotic storm systems contribute to these extreme wind speeds.
Counter-clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere, and clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere.
Two names for rapidly spinning air that is very dangerous are tornadoes and cyclones.
A rapidly revolving item is called a "spinning" object. Examples include a spinning top, carousel, or rotating blade.
Studying star and star types can be fun, but it can be challenging to remember each type. A Neuron star is a dense, rapidly spinning star.
richard arkwright
Yes, on average, the Northern Hemisphere experiences cooler temperatures compared to the Southern Hemisphere due to its higher percentage of landmass, which heats and cools more rapidly than water. This causes more temperature fluctuations in the Northern Hemisphere. Additionally, the Northern Hemisphere is also tilted away from the sun during winter, further contributing to colder temperatures.
These are: Tropical Tornado: or a Cyclone.
Twister, tornado.
That would be a tornado.
Yes. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star.
A cyclone or hurricane.
The name for a storm with rapidly spinning air that becomes dangerous is a tornado. Tornadoes can cause significant damage with their strong winds and are capable of causing devastation in a short period of time.