There is no "fajita" scale. The Fujita scale is used by meteorologists to rate tornadoes from F0 to F5 based on damage.
F0 damage: minor roof damage, gutter and awnings taken down, tree limbs broken.
F1 damage: House roofs severely stripped of material, mobile homes badly damaged, windows broken.
F2 damage: roofs torn from frame houses, mobile homes completely destroyed, cars lifted.
F3 damage: Walls from frame homes collapse, two story houses may lose the top floor, most trees uprooted
F4 damage: frame homes completely leveled and left as piles of debris, trees stripped of bark
F5 damage: strong frame homes disintegrate and are completely swept away, foundations are swept bare.
the Fujita scale (not the fajita scale) is used to tell how powerful a tornado is.
F5. And its the Fujita scale, not fajita.
scientists use fajita scale to measure hurricane intensity
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The strongest tornado in the Fujita scale is F5.
The Fujita scale is only for tornado intensity. Meteorologists use a different wind scale for hurricanes called the Saffir-Simpson scale.
Dr. Tetsuya Theodore Fujita
They use the Beaufort scale to classify winds and wind speeds.
The is no Fajita scale. The Fujita scale provides basic standards by which to assess the damage done by a tornado. Based on the severity of the damage a tornado is assigned a rating, which can range from F0 for the weakest tornadoes to F5 for the strongest.
Meteorologists use the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale to rate the intensity of a tornado. The EF scale ranges from EF0 (weakest) to EF5 (strongest). It takes into account the damage caused by the tornado to estimate its wind speed, as well as the type of structures affected. The scale provides a standardized way to communicate the strength of a tornado to the public.
meteorologists use rain gauges to measures the rain everyday
meteorologists use rain gauges to measures the rain everyday