Okay the first answer is Binghamton
The second one doesn't have an exact landmark so i'm not sure but it's between Binghamton and Ithaca
The third one try the internet, it's a general question, hope this helps:)
Answer:
Hurricanes need a lot of heat to form, which is why they usually occur over tropical seas (at least 26°C).
The sun is close to the equator, providing energy to heat the ocean.
The warm ocean heats the air above it causing it to rise rapidly.
Water evaporates quickly from the hot surface of the ocean, so the rising air contains great amounts of water vapour.
The rising air starts to spin (anti-clockwise in the northern hemisphere)
The centre of the storm - the eye - is calm.
As the air rises it cools, condenses and forms towering cumulonimbus clouds.
The rapidly rising air creates an area of intense low pressure. The low pressure sucks in air, causing very strong winds.
Once the storm moves over land it starts to lose energy and fades.
Explanation:
The answers that apply are:
1), 2) , 3), 4)
Let's look into them one by one:
1)It is absorbed by Earth.
- Earth is indeed a material that will absorb solar radiation, this is one of the reason why we have a different temperature in the morning and at night.
2)It is reflected by clouds.
- Cloud can reflect solar radiation as it is made up of water particles which can reflect the solar radiation back. This is why in a foggy day the sunlight is dimmer.
3)It is reflected by glacial ice.
-Glacial ice can reflect solar radiation. As glacial ice is smooth and light in colour,much solar radiation that was on the glacier is reflected, this is one of the reason how the North Pole and South Pole are cold all year.
4)It is condensed into visible light.
Solar radiation can light up the area depending on it's intensity, the more intense the radiation is,the brighter it will be.
5) is amplified by water molecules.
Although water molecules can keep the radiation as it has a high specific latent heat, it does not amplify the solar radiation.
Hope it helps!
The Mississippi-Missouri-Ohio river system is the largest and most significant river system in the world.