Yes. Different tornadoes have been described as making different sounds. The most common description is the sound of a freight train, but others have been described as sounding like jet engines, waterfalls, and high pitched whistles. One was described as having an eerie guttural roar.
thay are different because lava comes out a volcano and tornadoes have winds and rain and it twists
on the southern hemisphere tornadoes spin clockwise and on the north hemisphere tornadoes spin anticlockwise
Not really. Although hurricanes and tornadoes have some notable similarities, they are completely different phenomena. It is not uncommon for hurricanes to produce tornadoes, but most tornadoes are not a result of hurricanes.
No. Hurricanes and tornadoes are two different types of storm. Size is not the only difference.
Tornadoes and hurricanes are different weather phenomena. Tornadoes are rotating columns of air that extend from a thunderstorm to the ground, while hurricanes are large, rotating storms that form over warm ocean waters. They are not the same and have different characteristics and impacts.
Different sounds are made because they make different sounds waves. Sounds are made from vibrations abd also they travel through air particles...
No. recently. In recent years astronomers have observed magnetic vortices on the sun that have been informally dubbed "solar tornadoes" but they are not actual tornadoes and are driven by different mechanisms from tornadoes on Earth.
Yes. Both tornadoes and hurricanes are vortices, though they are on entire different scales.
This condition is called wind shear. It is indeed a crucial factor in producing tornadoes.
It produced by the sounds.
It produced by the sounds.
It produced by the sounds.