Another way is to interact with landscapes, such as the Appalachian Mountains of Hurricane Irene Root. This analysis uses the Geographic Information System (GIS) to describe the spatial pattern of rain produced by Irene and classifies other tropical cyclones that are identical to Irene in the United States. GIS is a system designed to capture, store, manipulate, inspect, manage, and display all kinds of geographic data.
What is a hurricane? The hurricane was a big and rotating storm, a strong wind was blowing in the center of relatively gentle eyes at 74 mph. Hurricane blows counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere. Storms are 5-6 miles high and 300 to 600 miles wide. It advances with a huge rotating gyroscope with 12 miles per hour and one hour. These storms are also known as tropical cyclones in the northern Indian Ocean in the Bay of Bengal and are known as typhoons in the western part of the North Pacific in Japan and South Korea. They can control the atmosphere and surface over thousands of square miles. They start at a specific season with low latitudes of the equatorial tropical ocean
When it rises, the air in the hurricane rotates. The air drawn into the center of the hurricane turns to the right in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere, depending on the Coriolis effect (the result of the rotation of the earth). There is no Coriolis effect near the equator and hurricanes do not occur within 300 miles (500 km) from the equator.
So in the northern hemisphere the wind turns right. In the Southern Hemisphere, they turned to the left. This wind deflection rotates the storm. As a result, hurricanes in the Northern Hemisphere rotate counterclockwise and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. This force also affects the course of the actual hurricane. If you are in the south of the equator, bend it in the direction of the right (clockwise) and left (counterclockwise) of the northern hemisphere. If you do not remember, move it within 5 degrees of the equator; the Coriolis force there is too weak to help make a hurricane