Both a vacuum cleaner and a tornado generate low pressure that pulls air inward.
A Vacuum Cleaner is similar to a tornado because a vacuum cleaner sucks things up as does a tornado. Some people might say a tornado is God's vacuum cleaner.
Both the tornado in bottle and a real tornado involve a vortex that strengthens via the principle of conservation of angular momentum.
There is no real term for the tip of a tornado. A small area of intense suction in a tornado may be referred to as a suction spot.
A large enough explosion probably would disrupt a tornado, so yes. However, no real scientist has ever put serious though toward this problem, as any bomb powerful enough to stop a tornado would cause more damage than the tornado itself.
Theoretical winds for an F6 tornado are 319-379 mph. However, because tornado ratings are based on damage, the highest a tornado could ever be rated is F5. So the F6 rating is purely theoretical with no applications in the real world. On the enhanced scale there is no EF6 level theoretical or otherwise.
A Vacuum Cleaner is similar to a tornado because a vacuum cleaner sucks things up as does a tornado. Some people might say a tornado is God's vacuum cleaner.
As with a vacuum a tornado continuously generates low pressure that essentially sucks air inwards, sometimes taking objects with it.
Cheap vacuum cleaner bags can be bought in most large stores such as Tesco. Sometimes real bargains can be found on eBay, so that is always worth a look.
Some vacuum cleaners can be very loud. Some range in the level of 75 to 90 decibals. However, there appears to be no real true measure of exactly how loud a vacuum can be since a vacuum can generate different levels of loudness based on possible problems the vacuum might have.
A small vacuum cleaner would be the only real way,but it's not really a problem.
I assume you are referring to the "tractor beam." This is actually a hypothetical device with the ability to attract one object to another from a distance, probably something like a giant vacuum cleaner, but it isn't real.
the waco tornado
Both the tornado in bottle and a real tornado involve a vortex that strengthens via the principle of conservation of angular momentum.
It was made of muslin and wire. That allowed it to be flexible enough to bend like a real tornado. It was 35 feet tall.
No
Because if there is a real tornado you will now what to do.
wrong, the real answer to this question is tornado