Meteorologist Question:

Tell me how are tropical cyclones different from tornadoes?

Tweet Share WhatsApp

Answer:

While both tropical cyclones and tornadoes are atmospheric vortices, they have little in common. Tornadoes have diameters on the scale of hundreds of metres and are usually produced from a single thunderstorm. A tropical cyclone, however, has a diameter on the scale of hundreds of kilometres and contains many thunderstorms. Tornadoes are primarily an over-land phenomena as solar heating of the land surface usually contributes toward the development of the thunderstorm that spawns the vortex (though over-water tornadoes have occurred). In contrast, tropical cyclones are purely an oceanic phenomena - they die out over-land due to a loss of a moisture source. Lastly, tropical cyclones have a lifetime that is measured in days, while tornadoes typically last on the scale of minutes.

Download Meteorologist PDF Read All 61 Meteorologist Questions
Previous QuestionNext Question
Tell me what is the tropical cyclones intensity scale? How is this different from the USA intensity scale?Explain me what does 'maximum sustained winds' mean? How does it relate to wind gusts in tropical cyclones?