Tornadoes are more common in areas with warmer climates than those with cold ones.
Tornadoes can occur almost anywhere thunderstorms do, though most often in areas with a warm or temperate climate. They occur during thunder storms.
Tornadoes occur in warm places because warm air at the surface rises and interacts with cooler air aloft, creating unstable atmospheric conditions that can lead to the formation of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. The contrast in temperature and moisture between warm and cool air masses can trigger the intense rotating updrafts necessary for tornado development.
they are in the wheather path.
Japan :)
Tornadoes do not occur at any particular temperature. However, they do generally require warm weather.
Tornadoes can occur in the warm sector of a developing mid-latitude cyclone, typically associated with the cold front. Tornadoes often form along the leading edge of the cold front where warm, moist air is lifted rapidly by the advancing cold air.
Tornado's normally in occur in Texas and the USA but other places too.
Yes. Tornadoes have been recorded on every continent other than Antarctica.
Very few places. The only areas where tornadoes do not occur are in polar climates and perhaps in some areas of extreme desert, such as parts of the Atacama.
Tornadoes can occur in most areas, but they occur more frequently in some places thanin others. Tornadoes form best under a given set of circumstances when a mass of cool and/or dry air pushes into a warm, moist unstable air mass with the right setup of wind shear, or a difference in wind speed and dirction with height. This leads to the formation of rotating thunderstorms that can spawn tornadoes. This setup occurs more frequently in some areas than in others.
Tornadoes can occur just about anywhere severe thunderstorms can but are very rare in a lot of places.
Tornadoes and other forms of severe weather are most often associated with cold fronts. However, warm fronts and stationary fronts have on occasion produced tornadoes.