The two types of air that combined are hot/warm and humid air.
Hurricane Sandy's winds formed by the Sun heating air and that air convecting.
No. Storm debris is not a form of air pollution.
A hurricane is a low pressure system that pulls air into it, primarily a low levels. However, a hurricane does nto form by pulling in other storms. Rather, a hurricane primarily pulls in warm, moist air. This air acts as fuel, allowing more storm cells to develop within the hurricane.
A hurricane forms over warm ocean waters, where the air is humid and unstable. As the warm air rises and cools, it condenses, releasing heat and forming thunderstorms. This process creates a low pressure system that continues to grow and organize, eventually developing into a hurricane.
The three main ingredients for a hurricane are warm ocean water, moist air, and atmospheric instability. These conditions provide the necessary fuel and dynamics for a hurricane to form and strengthen.
Hurricane Sandy's winds formed by the Sun heating air and that air convecting.
No; a hurricane consists of air and water.
No. Storm debris is not a form of air pollution.
moist and warm, causing water vapor to condense and form clouds. The intense upward motion of air within a hurricane also helps in the rapid formation of clouds.
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
A hurricane is a low pressure system that pulls air into it, primarily a low levels. However, a hurricane does nto form by pulling in other storms. Rather, a hurricane primarily pulls in warm, moist air. This air acts as fuel, allowing more storm cells to develop within the hurricane.
Hurricanes form when there is a layer of cold air above a layer of warm air. The warm air wants to go up the cold air wants to go down. When there is a finger of hot air rising a complimentary finger of cold air will descend - this is what a hurricane is. When ever you have something falling from a great height you have a drastic release of energy. This is the energy of the hurricane. In the broadest sense the energy comes from the sun that heated the low lying air that favoured the warm/cold transfer, this is the energy that raises the warm air to a higher elevation. It is the energy released when the cold air falls that the hurricane is mostly known for.
No, there is plenty of air (and air pressure) in a hurricane, and plenty of other ways to die in a hurricane.
When chemicals combine with water vapor in the air, they can form acidic compounds such as sulfuric acid or nitric acid. These compounds can contribute to acid rain and other forms of environmental pollution.
A hurricane is a system of sustained winds, so in the air.
A chemical change is when one or more objects combine to form a new object. For example, an iron nail can combine with the oxygen in the air to form iron oxide, or rust.
yeah its true