Mid-latitude cyclones are sometimes wider than hurricanes.
In neither size nor strength is Earl bigger, though Earl is now a category 4 and is approaching Katrina's maximum strength.
No, a hurricane's size is typically influenced more by its environment and atmospheric conditions than by changes in its eye pressure. While changes in the eye pressure can impact the storm's intensity and structure, they do not necessarily cause the storm to physically grow in size.
the spitfire is slightly faster but the hurricane had bigger guns which might have slowed it down.
Intensity has little to do with the size of the hurricane, and in fact some of the strongest hurricanes (like Andrew) have been quite compact.
There is no such thing as a category 6 hurricane. The maximum is category 5. This category is open-ended, meaning that once a hurricane reaches category 5 strength (sustained winds of 156 mph or greater) it is classed as a category 5 no matter how much stronger the winds are. Also, hurricanes are not rated by size. They are rated by wind speed. A stronger hurricane is not necessarily bigger. Category 2 winds are 96-110 mph. Category 5 winds are 156+ mph.
Hurricane Katrina Wasn't bigger than Ike.Ike Was 200 miles bigger than Katrina.
No. Hurricane Sandy was far larger than Hurricane Isaac.
Almost all hurricanes are bigger than Rhode Island
Jupiter.
In neither size nor strength is Earl bigger, though Earl is now a category 4 and is approaching Katrina's maximum strength.
They are completely different phenomena and cannot be compared in such a manner
No, it is not. Gustav is smaller in both size and hurricane strength than Katrina. Katrina's strength actually reached the Category 5 level whereas Gustav reached only a Category 4.
yes she was. if she went into the gulf, she would have covered more land
Yes. Much bigger. The eye of a hurricane is larger than the whole tornado in nearly all cases. The eye of a hurricane is usually 20 to 40 miles wide The smallest hurricane eye on record was 2.3 miles wide. Only a few tornadoes have been larger than this. The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.6 miles wide. The typical tornado is 50 to 100 yards wide.
no
No, a hurricane's size is typically influenced more by its environment and atmospheric conditions than by changes in its eye pressure. While changes in the eye pressure can impact the storm's intensity and structure, they do not necessarily cause the storm to physically grow in size.
the spitfire is slightly faster but the hurricane had bigger guns which might have slowed it down.