yes they do. that's why if you are outside the most protected place to go to is in a ditch.
No. If anything, the reduced friction may cause the wind speed to increase.
No, they just keep on going
Yes, because they loose the source they draw from, the oceans.
Typhoons gain strength when over warm waters, but cool waters and land causes them to lose strength.
Tornadoes are powerful and often destructive. They can be terryfying to those in their path, and devastating to those who lose their homes or loved ones.
Usually about 1,000 to maybe 10,000 or 30,000
Landforms and bodies of water affect typhoons based on what or how strong the energy is released by the landforms and bodies of water. Typhoons gain energy from warm ocean water and lose energy over cold water. Particularly, landforms lessen the strength of typhoons whenever the winds impact them
Tornadoes generally form over land and whether they are on land or over water has little effect on their intensity. It is a hurricane that weakens as it hits land.
Yes, because they loose the source they draw from, the oceans.
Water absorption will cause Balsa wood to lose its strength
Tornadoes usually lose strength when the warm, moist air that feeds the parent storm, usually by an influx of cooler air from the rainy or downdraft part of the storm.
People can lose property in tornadoes, lose friends and family, and possibly be injured or killed.
Hurricanes lose their strength quicker on land.
No. Hurricanes lose strength when they move over land. Thunderstorms can easily form and become very strong over both land and water.
passing over cooler water or land
People lose their homes, they lose their pets and lose their family
When you lose your strength all of a sudden, you collapse and suffer some dizziness.
Just like people, animals can be killed and injured by tornadoes and lose their habitats.
Typhoons gain strength when over warm waters, but cool waters and land causes them to lose strength.