Yes, some strong tornadoes create brief satellite tornadoes that circle the main funnel.
Landforms do not create tornadoes. Tornadoes are a product of severe thunderstorms.
Tornadoes do not create anything; they only destroy.
Not real tornado. Scientists have produces small vortices in labs that resemble tornadoes, and have simulated tornadoes in supercomputers, but they cannot create real tornadoes.
Tornadoes produce low pressure.
No. Storms and hurricanes can create tornados.
No. Tornadoes are caused by thunderstorms. Intense fires can create vortices called firewhirls but these are not considered tornadoes.
The devil did not create tornadoes. Tornadoes form from complex interactions in the atmosphere, not any supernatural entity.
yes they could
Yes, thunderstorms are a common environment for tornado formation. Tornadoes can form when warm, moist air rises rapidly within a thunderstorm, creating a rotating updraft. If the conditions are right, this rotation can intensify and touch the ground as a tornado.
Many hurricanes, but not all, produce tornadoes. However, most tornadoes do not come from hurricanes.
Tornadoes are associated with low pressure systems. The difference in air pressure helps create the conditions necessary for tornado formation, as the varying pressure causes air to move quickly and can create the rotation needed for a tornado to develop.
Cold fronts often do result in storms that produce tornadoes, but are not a direct cause of tornadoes. Not all tornadoes are associated with cold fronts, nor do all cold fronts result in the formation of tornadoes. Other conditions, such as wind shear and instability, need to be present for tornadoes to occur. Squall lines can produce tornadoes, but those tornadoes are usually short-lived and weak. Tornadoes are more often associated with discrete supercell thunderstorms.