water
Hurricanes that strike land weaken rapidly. If they re-emerge onto water they have the opportunity to restrengthen.
yes they can and sometimes hurricanes get stronger when they travel on water.
Not really. Hurricanes can only form over warm ocean water. Once they hit land they weaken rapidly and don't stay as hurricanes for very long.
Hurricanes are fueled by water.
Hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water. As the warm water evaporates and rises, it releases heat energy into the atmosphere, which drives the storm's circulation and intensifies its strength. Warm air over land can contribute to thunderstorms and rainfall associated with hurricanes when they make landfall, but the primary energy source for hurricanes is warm ocean water.
No. Tornadoes are on land. Hurricanes are storms on water.
Along Coastlines, warmer air relates to lower air pressure, thus air flows from the higher-pressure, cooler setting into the area of lower air pressure. If the land is warmer, it has lower air pressure. Air over the sea would therefore be cooler and thus have higher atmospheric pressure, and the air will naturally from from the higher pressure (in this case, from over the ocean) to the lower pressure (over the warmer land).So you get a wind from the water onto the land, or a sea breeze.
yes they charge in the water then hits land
No. Hurricanes start over water and tornadoes are on land.
Hurricanes that strike land weaken rapidly. If they re-emerge onto water they have the opportunity to restrengthen.
yes they can and sometimes hurricanes get stronger when they travel on water.
Not really. Hurricanes can only form over warm ocean water. Once they hit land they weaken rapidly and don't stay as hurricanes for very long.
Hurricanes don't actually aim for land. They area around a hurricane has very low pressure. The pressure systems, both high and low, will steer the hurricane. High pressure will keep the hurricane away. Usually, land just gets in the way.
Water can cause hurricanes, typhones and droughts. Water can provide essential water to land life on it.
Hurricanes are fueled by water.
Land breezes develop at night in coastal regions because the land cools down faster than the ocean. As a result, the relatively warmer air over the water rises, creating a region of lower pressure. Cooler air from the land then moves towards the lower pressure area over the water, resulting in the development of a land breeze.
Land and sea breezes are caused by the differential heating of land and water. During the day, land heats up faster than water, creating lower pressure over the land. Air moves from high pressure (sea) to low pressure (land), causing the sea breeze. At night, the land cools down faster than water, creating higher pressure over land, leading to the land breeze as air moves from the land to the sea.