Yes. Hurricanes produce torrentail rain, and thunderstorms will usually produce rain and sometimes hail. Since tornadoes are a product of strong thunderstorms, they will usually be accompanied by rain and are often accompanied by hail.
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.
Tornadoes are not part of a hurricane, but they can happen during a hurricane. Tornadoes in hurricanes tend to be weaker and more short-lived compared to standalone tornadoes, and they form under different conditions. They are often associated with landfalling hurricanes and occur as a result of the intense weather patterns within the storm.
New Orleans is an area of the United States prone to a couple of different natural disasters. The area is prone to hurricanes and tornadoes.
Some of the most common natural disasters include hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, tornadoes, and wildfires. The frequency and impact of these disasters can vary depending on the region and its susceptibility to specific hazards. Governments and communities often prepare and plan for these events to mitigate their effects.
Tornadoes, Hurricanes, Tsunamis, Drought, Earthquakes, and Whirlwinds are all natural disasters the happen on Earth. (Whirlwinds and Tornadoes are basically the same thing)
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.
Tornadoes can happen in any place that gets thunderstorms.
Just about. If a place can get strong thunderstorms it can get tornadoes.
Yes. Tornadoes occur during thunderstorms.
Tornadoes can happen anywhere - they're usually formed from severe thunderstorms.
Tornadoes can happen in any place that gets thunderstorms.
No. Tornadoes can occur almost anywhere that gets thunderstorms.
Tornadoes can happen anywhere that gets severe thunderstorms, but they are most common on the Great Plains of the United States.
Yes. It is fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes. However, hurricane-spawned tornadoes usually aren't as strong as those produce by other systems.
Tornadoes occur mostly in the months March-June as it is then that the collisions of air masses that can produce violent thunderstorms most often occur as that time of year is something of a transition between overall cold weather and overall warm weather. Though tornadoes can happen at any time of year. Hurricanes happen later in the year (mainly June-November) because they need warm ocean water to form and it usually takes a fairly long time for the ocean to become warm enough to produce hurricanes.
Tornadoes always happen during thunderstorms. They cannot occur without them.
Tornadoes do not happen IN the Gulf of Mexico. Tropical storms and hurricanes happen in the Gulf of Mex, but not tornadoes. Tornado-like features over water are called waterspouts.