Hurricanes, tornadoes, and virtually all other forms of weather occur in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere.
Tornadoes are formed in the troposphere
The troposphere. The troposphere is one of the four layers of the atmosphere (0-10km in altitude) containing water vapour. Clouds are formed by water condensing and as air cools. This is why cloud formation is possible because the temperature of the troposphere decreases with altitude.
No. Only Atlantic hurricanes, and even then, only about half of Atlantic hurricanes start there. Hurricanes can also form in the west Atlantic and the Caribbean. Hurricane Katrina, for example, formed near the Bahamas.
A hurricane is a destructive force. When it is formed and makes landfall is destroys or breaks down parts of the Earth.
No. Hurricanes occur in the troposphere, as does nearly all weather on earth.
Like all weather hurricanes occur in the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere.
We live in the troposphere....snow would be formed.
Ozone gas is not formed in troposphere. It is because the factors that create ozone are not present there.
Storm surges are formed during hurricanes.
Hurricanes, tornadoes, and virtually all other forms of weather occur in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere.
No. Hurricanes cannot produce islands of solid rock. Bermuda was formed by a now extinct volcano.
Tornadoes are formed in the troposphere
No, hurricanes must form over the ocean.
Because in the South they have warm waters that can cause hurricanes. Hurricanes are formed with warm water temperatures.
Hurricanes
IN the open ocean.