No, tornadoes do not chase people or respond to them in any way. Though to a person unfortunate enough to be in the path of a tornado it can feel like being chased.
Yes. People would not risk their lives chasing tornadoes if the were not interested.
chase
Meteorologists chase tornadoes because they can conduct research to better understand and predict them. Many storm chasers, though are not meteorologists, and just chase for the thrill or because tornadoes fascinate them.
They are called storm chasers.
There are a number of reasons. Some do it for the thrill. Some people find tornadoes to be irresistibly fascinating. Some people who chase tornadoes are spotters. They can report where a tornado is, which helps warn people who may be in the path. A few people who chase tornadoes are scientists whose goal is to study tornadoes and gain a better understanding of them. Some of the information they gather could improve tornado prediction.
People who study tornadoes are a type of meteorologist.
No. You wouldn't want to fly into a tornado; a hurricane is just about the limit there.
perhaps by a helicopter. if you were on land you would drown. you have to be high up during a hurricane and a helicopter can go high enogh but close enough to chase a hurrican. but you cant really chase a hurricane. you can watch bu not chase. that's what tornadoes are for.
This sentence is present tense. The verb - chase - is present.Chasedis past. To make this sentence past change the verb to the past form:Some people chasedtornadoes.
Not really. Twister got some things right and some things wrong. For one thing, based on the damage observed and the stated intensities, the tornadoes in Twister were generally larger and more intense than the average tornado. None of the tornadoes appeared to have been of less than F2 intensity, putting them in the strongest 10% of recorded tornadoes. Conversely, the final chase scene actually underplays the destructive potential of an F5 tornado. The manner in which some of the tornadoes threw large objects is also rather unlikely. That the tornadoes seemed to chase the storm chasers is also somewhat unrealistic. While such things have happened occasionally, most tornadoes stay on a relatively straight path. There are other minutiae that could be discussed, but that would make this answer rather long. In the movie's favor, tornadoes similar in appearance to those that appeared in Twister have occurred. This is related to the fact that, in designing the tornadoes for the movie, the filmmakers studied footage of real tornadoes. The Fujita scale is a real thing that is used to rate tornadoes.
Since tornadoes are a weather phenomenon most of the scientists who study them are meteorologists. Most storm chasers are not scientists.
Well, up to 100 tornadoes, can strike a large region not at the minute, but in a day or 2. It would be unusual for more than two tornadoes to strike an area as small as a city within a day end even more if they were simultaneous. Tornadoes are usually not very stable in close proximity to one another and will tend to merge together.
well people who chases tornadoes are storm chasers. Some of the more famous storm chasers include Reed Timmer, Josh Wurman, Warren Faidley, and Howard Blustein,