Hurricane storms are in categories and typically follow the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
The scale is as follows:
Category 1 75 - 95 mph winds
Category 2 96 - 110 mph winds
Category 3 111 - 129 mph winds
Category 4 130 - 156 mph winds
Category 5 157+ mph winds
Tornadoes, hurricanes, winter storms, and in fact most major storm types are associaed with low pressure.
A Hurricane or a Typhoon or a Cyclone.
The next three Atlantic named storms after Ike were Josephine, Kyle, and Laura. However, only Kyle became a hurricane, the others were only tropical storms. The three storms to reach hurricane strength after Ike were Kyle, Omar, and Paloma.
Not exactly. The name Rebekah is up for use in 2014. However, most hurricane seasons do not have enout storms to reach the letter R, as storms are named in alphabetical order. Addtionally, if this storm does occur, it may only be a trpoical storm, and might not reach hurricane strength.
That depends. "Super storm" does not have a definition in meteorology and has been applied to a variety of storms, some not as bad as a hurricane, and some worse than the typical hurricane. However, the very worst of hurricanes are far worse than these so- called super storms.
No. The eye of a hurricane is free of storms.
a tornado storm can be formed from a hurricane
YesSaturn is constantly having hurricane-like storms.
The hurricane hunters have satelites that tells them were all the storms are going on just like meteorologist use satelites to find weather and storms.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, winter storms, and in fact most major storm types are associaed with low pressure.
They are both storms
No. A hurricane is a type of storm, but most storms are not hurricanes.
No, there is no way a hurricane could get to Idaho.
what are the three types of winter storms.
they are all storms
hurricane
The most recent hurricane of the 2011 season is Hurricane Katia. This storm is in fact still active. Two other storms are active in the Atlantic: Tropical Storms Maria and Nate. Nate is expected to become a hurricane soon.