when a hurricane is approaching its peak intensity.

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keannu

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This sentence sounds vague. Is it a present tense or a future one? I think the latter.

gz12)The presence of lightning may be a clue to help forecasters understand when a hurricane is approaching its peak intensity. Although satellite and radar technology are generally able to predict the path of a storm with some accuracy, how much and when a storm will intensify is harder to forecast...
 
Neither. It describes a habitual action. Every time there is a hurricane, the presence of lightning helps the forecasters understand when it is reaching its maximum intensity.
 
My grammar book says the difference between the present tense and the present progressive tense is like the following.

1.present tense - timeless things(past+present+future, habitual or repetitive things), future, etc
2.present progressive tense - things happening at the moment, recent things, future, etc

Based on this, "when a hurricane approaches its peak intensity" sounds more proper, but there seems to be no difference between the two as a theory is only a theory. What do you think?
 
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