74 mph
A hurricane with 135 mph winds would be a category 4.
No. While they are both spinning storms, tornadoes, unlike hurricanes, can and frequently do form over land.
roughly a mile
A hurricane. A tornado is usually no more than a quarter of a mile wide.
Hurricanes can vary in size, with the width of the storm typically ranging from around 100 to 300 miles (160 to 480 kilometers) across. The size of a hurricane can affect the extent of its destructive impacts, such as strong winds, heavy rainfall, and storm surge.
A hurricane will start as a Tropical Wave. It then becomes a Tropical Depression. A TD is given a number but not a name. Once the TD reaches 39 mile per hour winds its given a name and becomes a Tropical Storm. After reaching 74 mile per hour winds it becomes a hurricane.
on coastline they erode beaches and in land they flood with whats known as a storm surge and depending on the category they start at 75 mile per hour windspeed and a category 5 is capable of up to 200 mile per hour winds one has never been recorded at this speed but its believed the early 1900s hurricane of galveston was exceeding 200 mile per hour winds.
A hurricane with 135 mph winds would be a category 4.
The deadliest hurricane to hit Honduras was Hurricane Fifi. It hit the country in September 1974 as a Category 2 hurricane. It had 110 mile per hour winds which resulted in between 8,000 and 10,000 fatalities.
180 mile per hour winds, heavy rain, and big temperature differences.
No, a hurricane is not a tornado over water. A tornado and a hurricane are quite different. A hurricane is a large-scale self-sustaining storm pressure system, typically hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is a small-scale vortex dependent on a parent thunderstorm rarely over a mile wide. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
On the first point: it doesn't. Hurricanes and tornadoes are two entirely different types of storm. A hurricane is its own large-scale storm system typically hundreds of miles across. A tornado is a small-scale vortex spawned by a thunderstorm and is rarely more than a mile wide. Hurricanes often spawn tornadoes when they reach land; weakening low-level winds create wind shear, which can set thunderstorms in the outer bands rotating on a smaller scale than the hurricane itself. On the second point, you could experience a 73 mph wind in a hurricane if you were not in the strongest part of it. By definition, a hurricane has maximum sustained winds of 74 mph or more. If peak winds are less than 74 mph, then the system is merely a tropical storm.
If you are going "one mile per hour", it takes exactly one hour to go a mile.
A weak hurricane typically has sustained wind speeds between 74-95 mph, categorizing it as a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale. While it may still cause damage, it is considered less severe compared to stronger hurricanes.
No. One mile per hour is 1.609 kilometers per hour.
15 miles/hour
1 mile per hour is further than 1 km per hour