Tornadoes do not produce precipitation. Tornadoes are usually often accompanied by precipitation, but the amount is not related to the strength of the tornado.
A tornado itself does not produce rain, but it can accompany a tornado. The storms the produce tornadoes, called supercells typically produce very heavy rain, often enough to prompt flash flood warnings. This rain may stop before the tornado comes, or the tornado may be rain wrapped. Some storms however, called LP (low-precipitation) supercells produce little to no rain at all, but can still produce tornadoes.
it depends on how strong the tornado is the stronger it is the bigger it will be
Weight is not something that is measure in a tornado. Even then, the size of a tornado, and therefore the amount of air it contains, varies widely.
6-10 In
With too much precipitation.
Tornadoes do not produce precipitation and they typically form in the rain free portion of their parent storms. A tornado is defined a a violently rotating column of air in contact with the ground and the cloud base of a thunderstorm. So as long as it meets this definition and has winds strong enough to cause damage it is a tornado.
It depends. Most tornadoes are preceded by very heavy rain, but they sometimes form in low-precipitation (LP) storms, which produce little or no rain.
A tornado itself does not produce rain, but it can accompany a tornado. The storms the produce tornadoes, called supercells typically produce very heavy rain, often enough to prompt flash flood warnings. This rain may stop before the tornado comes, or the tornado may be rain wrapped. Some storms however, called LP (low-precipitation) supercells produce little to no rain at all, but can still produce tornadoes.
This all depends on location, precipitation received, time of year, etc. There is no standard number for all parts of the world or the country for how much forage is produced per acre.
Marine west coast climates have much precipitation because
Depends how large or small the Tornado is.
You can find out how much precipitation fell by looking at a rain gauge.
Marine west coast climates have much precipitation because
The Tropical rain forest gets about 50 to 260 inches of precipitation yearly
The issue is not the amount of wind, but how the wind moves. A tornado consists of a violently rotating column of air produced by a thunderstorm. As a general rule the winds must be strong enough to cause damage, but there is no hard and fast lower limit.
Tornadoes form during severe thunderstorms called supercells, which often produce heavy rain and sometimes large hail. The tornado itself often develops in a rain-free part of the storm, but may also be shrouded in heavy rain. Rainfall rates can exceed an inch per hour.
The Tri-State tornado itself is believed to have been a single tornado as the damage path appears to have been continuous. That monster of a storm was part of an outbreak that produced 9 known tornadoes. The actual number of tornadoes in the outbreak was probably much higher, however, as at the time there was no system of recording tornadoes.