Hurricanes can be potentially deadlier.
In U.S. history the deadliest tornado had a death toll of 695 while the deadliest hurricane had a death toll of 6,000 to 12,000.
In world history the deadliest tornado had a death toll of about 1,300. whil the deadliest hurricane had a death toll of 300,000 to 500,000.
A hurricane. A tornado is usually no more than a quarter of a mile wide.
Tornadoes are smaller in scale compared to hurricanes and are typically embedded within them. So while a tornado can form within or near a hurricane, a direct collision between a tornado and a hurricane as two separate weather events is highly unlikely.
If you mean a hurricane in a bottle then yes, a hurricane in a bottle and a tornado in a bottle are the same thing. In shape, however, the vortex bears more resemblance to a tornado than a hurricane.
While rare, it is possible for a tornado to form within a hurricane. These tornadoes, known as "tornadoes embedded in hurricanes," can be particularly dangerous due to the already intense weather conditions from the hurricane.
Winter storm is another word for this group tornado hurricane blizzard and thunderstorm
Hurricanes tend to be deadlier because the affect a larger area, and cause widespread flooding in addition to having strong winds, while tornadoes are limited to a relative small swath of damage cause by wind and debris.
Neither. Tornado and twister are two words for the same thing.
There is no such things as "a Katrina hurricane." Hurricane Katrina was a particular hurricane that hit the Gulf Coast in 2005. Hurricane Katrina was worse than any tornado on record and deadlier and more destructive than any recorded snowstorm. Katrina was worse than most earthquakes, but not all. Hurricane Katrina killed about 1,800 people. Some earthquakes have had death tolls in the hundreds of thousands.
It can't. A hurricane can't become a tornado.
The Galveston hurricane was far deadlier, with a death toll of 6,000 to 12,000 compared to Katrina's 1,800.
No. Hurricanes are generally deadlier. There have been a number of hurricanes with death tolls over 1,000 but only one known tornado holds that distinction.
No, a hurricane is a huge storm hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is tiny by comparison.
The duration of Hurricane Ivan tornado outbreak is 48 hours.
The duration of Hurricane Georges tornado outbreak is 144 hours.
a tornado because of when it hit it it keeps going but a hurricane will stop at land
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.
There is no conflict between a hurricane and a tornado. In fact, hurricanes often produce tornadoes. However, if you were to somehow pitch the force of a hurricane against the force of a tornado, the hurricane would "win" without being significantly affected. Although a tornado can have faster winds than a hurricane, hurricanes are much larger and have several orders of magnitude more energy than a tornado.