How Typhoon Yolanda is Affected by landmasses and body of Water?
recall one super typhoon that hits a certain region in the country and explain how are they land masses and bodies of water of that certain area contribute to the formation of that super typhoon and devastation it caused.
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Answer:
Typhoon Haiyan
Explanation:
Land masses weaken typhoons, causing them to dissipate if the land mass is large. Typhoons are sustained by deep convection and release of latent heat, and so require warm ocean water to sustain the convection and wind speeds. If a typhoon moves over land, this supply of warm ocean water is cut off, and the typhoon dissipates. If the typhoon makes landfall on a mountainous landmass (e.g. Taiwan), the forced vertical ascent of air due to the mountains can result in huge amounts of rain, maybe several feet in one or two days.