No. Tornadoes can form in relatively cool air. However they form more easily when there is plenty of warm, moist air to fuel the thunderstorms that spawn them.
You cannot make a tornado. The primary materials in a tornado are air and water vapor, but the dynamics that create a tornado are complex, impossible to control, and not completely understood.
Make sure that the tornado stays nonexistent.
Well, first of all, there is warm\hot air moving around and it's a little higher. Cool\cold air does the same thing, but lower. Now that you know that, a tornado occurs when the cool and warm air are moving past each other and then they mix together and spin and build to make a tornado! :-)
There is no "exact" temperature for a tornado to form, but it usually happens in hot, humid areas. It all has to do with how heavy the rain and wind is and what direction its going in.
Yes. If a tornadic vortex does not make contact with the ground it does not meet the defintion of a tornado, and is simply called a funnel cloud. If the violent circulation (not necessarily the visible funnel) reaches the ground it is considered a tornado.
it makes a tornado
it makes a tornado
Humans can not effect a tornado. Only nature can make a tornado occur. The cold and hot air curl together and form the tornado.
80 degrees is the average temperature when a tornado takes place.
Tornado
No!
Yes. Tornadoes are often preceded by hot weather.
Generally not. The storms that produce tornado form more often along cold fronts than warm fronts. So more often the weather is hot before a tornado and cooler afterwards.
to my cauculations it is a tornado
it makes a tornado
No. A twister is a tornado.
You cannot make a tornado. The primary materials in a tornado are air and water vapor, but the dynamics that create a tornado are complex, impossible to control, and not completely understood.