Whenever there's rain, there's a chance that the rain water is a bit acidic. So yeah, you can get acid rain in tornadoes.
To have acid rain, you first have to have rain. And deserts are kind famous for not having much rain. So yeah, it CAN happen. But places with more rain will get more acid rain.
No. Tornadoes occur during thunderstorms when the weather is warm. They often occur in a rain-free portion of a storm, but rain and often hail are generally nearby.
Acid rain does not depend on seasons except that some times of the year have more precipitation (snow, rain, sleet, hail) than others.
No, rain does not help a tornado form. Tornadoes are formed by severe thunderstorms with specific atmospheric conditions, such as wind shear and instability. Rain can occur before, during, or after a tornado, but it is not a contributing factor to the formation of a tornado.
Acidic rain causes chemical weathering to occur. Dissolution in particular.
it occurs in the city of belarumus
Water pollution can occur from burning fossil fuels due to the acid rain. Fossil fuels will pollute the atmosphere which will result into acid rain.
winter,sometimes rain and Tornado's hope it helped!
Yes. If a tornado is rain wrapped rain can be drawn into the circulation.
No. Many tornadoes form in a rain-free portion of their parent thunderstorms. Some tornadoes form with low-precipitation supercells, which produce little or no rain.
Most storms that produce tornadoes also produce rain. However most tornadoes occur in a rain-free area of the storm. This is a good thing as it makes them easier to see. There are also rain-wrapped tornadoes where rain is falling in the part of the storm with the tornado. Rain wrapped tornadoes are especially dangerous because they are difficult, even impossible to see.Strong, even damaging winds during a thunderstorm, raining or not, do not necessarily mean that there is a tornado though. There are a number of other phenomena than can produce winds equivalent to those of a tornado.
acid rain, chemical spillages