Hurricanes are classified based on their maximum wind speeds. There are 5 categories, with Category 1 being the lowest strength and Category 5 being the highest strength. Some dangers associated with hurricanes -- especially along the coast -- are storm surges, high winds and large amounts of rain that can cause flash flooding. Sometimes you can even get severe thunderstorms that spin off of hurricanes and produce tornadoes.
B.By the intensity of their windsC.By the height of the sea waves that result
They are classified by the speed of the winds and how much of a flood of water there is.Hurricanes are classified in terms of wind speed and flooding which are measured using the Saffir-Simpson Scale.
Hurricane Katrina reached hurricane status on August 25, 2005.
There is no such thing as a category 11 hurricane. Any hurricane with winds exceeding 156 mph is classified as category 5.
Hurricane Dora from earlier this year was a category 4 hurricane.
74 mph or more
Category 1 (the lowest) for a hurricane is winds of 74-95 miles an hour.
Hurricane Katrina reached hurricane status on August 25, 2005.
A hurricane is classified as a low-pressure system.
There is no such thing as a category 11 hurricane. Any hurricane with winds exceeding 156 mph is classified as category 5.
Hurricane Dora from earlier this year was a category 4 hurricane.
74 mph or more
Hurricane Rita reached maximum sustained wind speeds of 180 mph when it was classified as a Category 5 hurricane.
Category 1 (the lowest) for a hurricane is winds of 74-95 miles an hour.
Hurricanes such as Katrina are classified as tropical cyclones. They are intense storms that form over warm ocean waters and can cause significant damage with high winds, heavy rain, and storm surges.
Yes. A category 3 hurricane has sustained winds in the range of 111-129 mph with higher gusts. Any hurricane rated category 3 or higher is classified as a major hurricane.
Sandy was a hurricane for most of its time, peaking as a category 2 hurricane before striking Cuba. At landfall in the U.S. Sandy was still at hurricane intensity but had transitioned into a post-tropical cyclone.
It was at first classified as a category 1 hurricane before dwindling down to a tropical depression one. So there. Bet you wish you were me. Stick it.
It wasn't classified as a hurricane, it was listed as a nor'easter category 4.