maritime polar MP
cA
The California Current carries cold water to Mexico from the North Pacific Ocean. :-)
The strength of the hurricane would decrease, as hurricanes get their energy from warm ocean water.
A hurricane will not form over cold ocean water, that is why hurricanes rarely form in the winter; the ocean is usually too cold. However, you cannot simply cool ocean water like that. The amount of energy stored in the water making it warm is enormous, to great for us to ever hope to manipulate.
cP
A hurricane typically produces heavy rain using regular water from the atmosphere, not ocean water. The intense winds of a hurricane can pick up moisture from the ocean surface and carry it over land, where it falls as precipitation.
Cold winds typically originate from regions with lower temperatures such as polar regions or areas where cold air masses form and move towards areas of higher pressure, resulting in the flow of cold air. These winds can bring cooler temperatures and may be influenced by factors such as the Earth's rotation, pressure gradients, and terrain features.
A monsoon has a cold and a warm front. The cold front is where ocean water (any water) comes over the land and makes heavy rains. The warm front is where all the water from the land is suck up in the sky and brings it to the ocean.
A larger rapidly spinning storm that originates over an ocean in the southern hemisphere is called a tropical cyclone. It is known as a hurricane or typhoon in other parts of the world.
cold and dry
No. Typhoons are tropical cyclones, and as such can only form over warm ocean water.
Hurricanes do not form near the equator because the Coriolis effect is weak at the equator, which is necessary for the rotation that drives the formation of hurricanes. Additionally, they do not form over cold ocean waters, as the warm water provides the energy needed for the storms to develop.