Hurricanes are formed by wind . And if the wind goes on for a long time , it slowly comes down and makes a funel shape . And that is a hurricane.
A hurricane is shaped like a spiral of clouds with an almost perfect circle in its center, the eye.
The fastest winds in a hurricane are in the eyewall, a ring shaped area of intense convention just outside the eye.
The eye wall of a hurricane is a ring shaped area of especially strong convection in a hurricane surrounding the eye. It is the strongest part of the storm.
The weakest winds are found in the eye. as for the strongest i would guess the outter edges
No, funnels are associated with tornadoes, not hurricanes.
The eye of a hurricane is an area of calm, often clear air at the center of a hurricane. The eye wall of a hurricane is the area surrounding the eye, where the strongest winds are.
No, a hurricane is a huge storm hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is tiny by comparison.
The strongest part of a hurricane is the eyewall, a ring shaped area of intense convection just outside the eye.
The fastest winds in a hurricane are in the eyewall, a ring shaped area of intense convention just outside the eye.
The strongest winds in a hurricane are located in a ring-shaped area called the eyewall, which surrounds the central area of calm weather called the eye.
The eye wall of a hurricane is a ring shaped area of especially strong convection in a hurricane surrounding the eye. It is the strongest part of the storm.
The weakest winds are found in the eye. as for the strongest i would guess the outter edges
No, funnels are associated with tornadoes, not hurricanes.
Yes. The strongest winds of a hurricane are found in the eye wall, a ring shaped area surrounding the eye.
The eye of a hurricane is an area of calm, often clear air at the center of a hurricane. The eye wall of a hurricane is the area surrounding the eye, where the strongest winds are.
No, a tornado is accompanied by such a cloud. Hurricanes generally have ordinary-looking storm clouds if you can see them through the rain.
F5 is not a category used to rate hurricanes, only tornadoes. Category 5 is the strongest category used to rate hurricanes. Atlantic hurricanes. Records of older hurricanes may be incomplete The "Cuba" hurricane of 1924 The "Labor Day" hurricane of 1935 Hurricane Dog 1950 Hurricane Easy 1951 Hurricane Janet 1955 Hurricane Cleo 1958 Hurricane Donna 1960 Hurricane Ethel 1960 Hurricane Carla 1961 Hurricane Hattie 1961 Hurricane Beulah 1967 Hurricane Camille 1969 Hurricane Edith 1971 Hurricane Anita 1977 Hurricane David 1979 Hurricane Allen 1980 Hurricane Gilbert 1988 Hurricane Hugo 1989 Hurricane Andrew 1992 Hurricane Mitch 1998 Hurricane Isabel 2003 Hurricane Ivan 2004 Hurricane Emily Hurricane Katrina 2005 Hurricane Rita 2005 Hurricane Wilma 2005 Hurricane Dean 2007 Hurricane Felix 2007 Pacific Category 5 Hurricanes Hurricane Patsy 1959 Unnamed Hurricane 1959 Hurricane Ava 1976 Hurricane Emilia 1994 Hurricane Gilma 1994 Hurricane John 1994 Hurricane Guillermo 1997 Hurricane Linda 1997 Hurricane Elida 2002 Hurricane Hernan 2002 Hurricane Kenna 2002 Hurricane Ioke 2006 Hurricane Rick 2009 Hurricane Celia 2010
Such a storm is called a hurricane.