No. Tornadoes cannot form during very cold weather.
The typical temperature during a tornado can vary, depending on the temperature of the air inside the tornado. There have been temperatures recorded as low as 50 degrees and as high as 103 degrees.
No. An F5 is the strongest tornado that is able to form.
There is not particular temperature at which tornadoes form. It is common, however, for the weather to be hot and humid before a tornado and its parent thunderstorm come through and to be cooler afterwards.
Tornadoes cannot form in space. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
Tornadoes can form anywhere!!
There is no "exact" temperature for a tornado to form, but it usually happens in hot, humid areas. It all has to do with how heavy the rain and wind is and what direction its going in.
That is not known. Few measurements have been taken from inside a tornado and few if any of those included temperature.
Yes. A tornado watch simply means that general conditions are favorable for tornadoes to form. A tornado warning means that a tornado has been detected or may form at any moment.
There is no particular temperature at which tornadoes form. Tornado formation depends on many factors, of which temperature in different parts of the atmosphere is just one. However, tornadoes almost never form in temperatures below 10 degrees Celsius.
No. Because of the sharp pressure drop temperature in a tornado actually decreases.
No. We cannot prevent tornadoes.
Tornadoes can form in just about any sort of terrain.
It varies, but tornadoes usually form in warm weather and are followed by a temperature drop. This is because warm air has more energy to power the storms that produce tornadoes. The temperature near the tornado may be a bit lower as the air will likely have been cooled somewhat by rain. There would be another temperature drop inside the tornado itself as a result of the pressure drop.
No, they can form any time of the year. The right conditions for tornadoes are just more common during tornado season.
tornado formation is not based on temperature, but upon storm structure. you cannot use temperature to determine tornados
The typical temperature during a tornado can vary, depending on the temperature of the air inside the tornado. There have been temperatures recorded as low as 50 degrees and as high as 103 degrees.
Partially. A tornado warning means that a tornado is likely to form or already has formed.