Yes. Extratropical cyclones happen all the time, and at times the Atlantic Ocean has had as many as 5 tropical cyclones at the same time. Right now (August 18, 2010) there are two tropical cyclones in the Pacific: Tropical Storm Fernanda and Hurricane Greg
Cyclones are named by designated meteorological agencies in different regions of the world. Typically, they have a predetermined list of names that are rotated and retired once a cyclone causes significant damage or loss of life.
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Cyclones are fueled by warm ocean waters, typically at least 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit). The warm water provides the energy needed for the cyclone to intensify and develop. Heat and moisture from the ocean's surface rise and create the conditions necessary for a cyclone to form and strengthen.
Because tropical cyclones feed off of the moisture of oceans and the warmer the water is, the stronger and faster the hurricane will growDo_tropical_cyclones_form_over_land
In the Pacific they are called typhoons. Generically, hurricanes and typhoons are both tropical cyclones. A tropical cyclone is the generic term for a non-frontal, synoptic scale, low-pressure system over tropical or sub-tropical waters with organized convection (i.e. thunderstorm activity) and definite cyclonic surface wind circulation.
Yes. Cyclones can happen at any time of year.
They can happen at any time. The United States gets two types of cyclones: tropical cyclones (tropiical storms and hurricanes) and mid-latitude cyclones. Tropical cyclones typically hit the United States in the later half of summer and early fall. Mid-latitude cyclones are more common and can occur at any time, but are most common and strongest in the colder half of the year.
Cyclones - video game - happened in 1994.
they are extremely rare in australia but in some places they happen every month two times!
Philippines
when cyclones happen most
"South Asian Cyclones"Two cyclones have hit South Asia .
Cyclones occur in the Pacific. Hurricanes occur in the Atlantic
No. Cyclones are weather, tsunamis are geological. Sometimes if the hurricane is big enough and starts out way deep in the ocean then there is a good chance it can cause large waves, but a wave generated by a hurricane is not the same as a tsunami.
air pushes the tide ; making it bigger
Earthquakes, landslides, floods, avalanches, volcanic eruptions and cyclones.
Earthquakes, tsunamis, cyclones and and bad weather.