Interesting idea.
Unlikely. Hurricanes and typhoons are formed from the rising air over warm oceans. When the Hurricanes reach land, the storms begin to dissipate. Even with significant global warming, hurricanes and typhoons will still dissipate when crossing the relatively cool surface of land at night. Therefore, unless there is a wind pattern that keeps the storm over warm water permanently then the storms will be transient events.
Anyway, global warming might cause changes to storm patterns and their intensity. But the earth's surface will keep the atmosphere in a dynamic state which gives rise to storms and likewise breaks them down.
2006-08-21 13:25:15
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answer #1
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answered by tke999 3
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Besides sea-surface temperatures, hurricanes are also strongly affected by vertical wind shear (increase in winds w/ height).
I am not sure of what would happen w/ the vertical wind shear in an excessively warmed scenario, but usually when convection around the ITCZ is enhanced, a stronger Hadley-Walker circulation is developed and generates a strong sub-tropical high. A stronger subtropical high would generally bring on stronger trade winds and probably stronger winds aloft too. If this were to happen, hurricane potential could actually go down because they need very weak environmental winds to start up and intensify.
2006-08-21 19:10:52
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answer #2
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answered by tbom_01 4
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while, as now, there's a finite quantity of water and rainfall is taken as averaged remarkable all over the realm, there nevertheless ought to be a finite quantity of water in equilibrium, adjustments in rainfall development would perhaps take place, however the finite quantity will continually stay, if the rather some rain is locked up as ice or snow, then could it soften, it could have here outcomes; North pole areas, it rather is going to soften and make no longer the slightest distinction in standard height of oceans via fact ice melts into water and its Mole MASS in maintains to be a similar: Ice interior the South pole has its MASS pressing down upon the forged landmass that's in actuality a floating Tectonic plate upon our Earths crust, get rid of the load of the ice and this crust will regulate itself into its very own equilibrium and as earlier the ice will have no effect upon the waters height and all tectonic plates will glide in equilibrium. As for storms, there are thousands and thousands each and each 365 days, so even dry places will finally get a glut of water, storms are via stress ameliorations attempting ever greater to realize equilibrium all over the realm, yet, via SUNS effect it may on no account take place via fact daily as one section is warmed up the sunlight finally subsides or is obscured via cloud and the cooling starts, ensuing in stress drop. Its a staggering international without political interferences and tarnished technological awareness.
2016-09-29 12:52:42
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answer #3
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answered by alia 4
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I highly doubt it. Our weather systems aren't even close to the ones that exist on Jupiter. As for Global Warming, that in itself I find to be an non-credible claim that it will destroy the world.
2006-08-21 11:49:18
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Since there is no global warming there will be now storms as you describe. Even IF there was global warming there still wouldn't be storms as you describe.
2006-08-21 11:55:17
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answer #5
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answered by Archer Christifori 6
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Jupiter doesn't have permanent storms, however it does have storms that last a very long time.
2006-08-21 11:49:21
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answer #6
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answered by dinizle26 2
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I'd opine that it can't. Earth's atmosphere is like the peel on an apple compared to Jupiter, which is almost ALL atmosphere.
2006-08-21 11:50:35
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answer #7
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answered by Engineer-Poet 7
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"global warming" is simply a scare tactic.
even Al Gore admits that fact.
2006-08-21 12:07:31
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answer #8
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answered by mnm75932 3
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No. WE have different gasses at different temps. Because of the geographic makeup of our planet coupled with the speed of her rotation, this phenom. would not be very likely to happen.
2006-08-22 02:36:23
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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No...
2006-08-21 11:51:26
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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