Also cyclonic.
No. While there are strong storms on Mars, some of which are cyclonic, none of them have the right characteristics to be called hurricanes.
The statements "Hurricanes cover a larger area than tornadoes" and "Hurricanes have strong winds" are both true. Tornadoes most certainly can kill people.
Hurricanes form over warm ocean water while tornadoes usually form over land.
hurricanes
Sometimes a hurricane can produce tornadoes, but most tornadoes are not produced by hurricanes.
Both are examples of storms with violent, cyclonic winds
No. While there are strong storms on Mars, some of which are cyclonic, none of them have the right characteristics to be called hurricanes.
Most tornadoes are cyclonic, meaning they rotate counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern hemisphere. However, a very small percentage of tornadoes are anticyclonic, rotating in the opposite direction.
Not really. While it is not uncommon for a hurricane to produce tornadoes, most tornadoes are the product of mid-latitude storm systems that have nothing to do with hurricanes.
cyclonic weather systems in the Caribbean are called hurricanes
all states get tornadoes while only coastal states get hurricanes
They don't. While it is fairly common for a hurricane to produce tornadoes, most tornadoes are not associated with hurricanes. The thunderstorms that produce tornadoes may produce strong, even hurricane-force winds, but that does not make them hurricanes.
no hurricanes differ from tornadoes
No. While many hurricanes do produce tornadoes, most tornadoes are the result of storm systems other than hurricanes. Addtionally, the tornadoes that do form in hurricanes usually form along the front part of the storm.
Not really. Although hurricanes and tornadoes have some notable similarities, they are completely different phenomena. It is not uncommon for hurricanes to produce tornadoes, but most tornadoes are not a result of hurricanes.
hurricanes can have tornadoes.
No. In the northern hemisphere tornadoes an hurricanes both turn counterclockwise apart from a very small percentage of tornadoes. They turn clockwise in the southern hemisphere.