When two hurricanes collide and merge, they can create a larger and more powerful storm. This can result in stronger winds, heavier rainfall, and more destructive impacts in the affected areas.
When two F5 tornadoes collide, the stronger tornado would likely absorb the weaker one, leading to even more destructive winds and intensity. This collision could result in a wider and more devastating path of destruction. Additionally, it may lead to erratic and unpredictable behavior, further increasing the danger to anything in its path.
A tornado and a hurricane don't exactly meet as they occur on completely different scales. A hurricane is its own large-scale storm system while a tornado is a small-scale phenomenon that occurs within a larger system. Hurricanes often produce tornadoes. Such tornadoes behave more or less like those produced by other systems.
If two hurricanes were to collide, the potential impact and consequences could be catastrophic. The combined strength of the storms could result in even stronger winds, heavier rainfall, and more widespread destruction. This could lead to severe flooding, landslides, and extensive damage to infrastructure and property. The resulting devastation could overwhelm emergency response efforts and lead to loss of life and displacement of communities.
Sure, what would you like to know about hurricanes?
Yes. Hurricanes spin counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern (where they are called cyclones). However, because the hurricanes are so large, a person on the ground would not notice the rotation.
In all probability nothing at all. In about 5 billion years the Andromeda Galaxy will merge with our Milky Way Galaxy (note the word merge, they merge not collide). The distances between stars and planets is so great that in most cases, the merge will happen without any major changes. This is not to say that nothing will happen. Gravitational interactions between close stars could have a catastrophic effect on any planetary system. However, as said before the chances are slim. It's like shooting a shotgun at an object 1 mile away and hoping to hit it with just one pellet.
If two plates were to collide they would either go up over the surface and form a volcano, or they would collide and go downward forming a trench or a large crevice.
They would merge into a single although much larger tornado
It is extremely unlikely that a neutron star (or any star or planet) will collide with the Earth, so this is not something that you need to worry about, however, if a neutron star were to collide with the Earth, the Earth would be captured by the intense gravitational field of the neutron star, and would be absorbed by the star. Under sufficient pressure, electrons and protons will merge to form neutrons, and so the atomic matter of which the Earth is composed can be converted into pure neutrons.
Should Earth ever collide with a black hole, it would get destroyed.
A tornado and a cyclone cannot collide as they work on entirely different orders of magnitude. A cyclone is is its own large-scale self-sustaining weather system. A tornado is a small-scale vortex that is part of a parent thunderstorm, which is itself usually part of a larger storm system. Most tornadoes form from storms that develop along the fronts connected to a mid-latitude cyclone, and some are produced in theouter storm bands of tropical cyclones. When two cyclones collide, they merge into one.
You would have a black hole the size of the combined mass of the two black holes.
Suggesting a merge sends a question to a CA to approve or decline a merge. When you merge questions, you do not change the wording of the questions. Normally we would not notice that the questions do not change because the merge happens instantly, but since there is a delay, we notice it. Don't worry even though it looks like nothing has happened, something will happen.
If they did then they would collide. They could merge into a larger planet or get blasted into space. In the latter case, the smaller parts would continue in individual orbits until they were attracted, by gravity, into other planets or coalesce into a new planet.
A merge request usually results from someone trying to edit or re-word a question into the wording of a question that already exists.For instance, if I had the question "What is a fxo?" and I reworded it to "What is a fox," that correctly-spelled question already exists on our site. When this happens, then different things might happen, depending on your permissions on the site:People with the power to merge would get a button asking them if they want to merge the questions together, and if they clicked it, it would happen.People withOUT the power to merge would get a button asking them if they want to merge the questions together, and if they clicked it, it would send a request to the supervisors, where they could double-check the request and either approve or deny it.
When two F5 tornadoes collide, the stronger tornado would likely absorb the weaker one, leading to even more destructive winds and intensity. This collision could result in a wider and more devastating path of destruction. Additionally, it may lead to erratic and unpredictable behavior, further increasing the danger to anything in its path.
They would merge into one larger black hole, and give out a brief burst of X-rays.