Yes. The faster the winds in a tornado the worse the damage will be. Weak tornadoes with winds of 110 mph or less cause some damage, but do not devastate communities.
The very strongest of tornadoes, those rated EF5 wind winds over 200 mph can annihilate entire neighborhoods.
It is useful to know the wind speed of a tornado because it provides an understanding of tornado intensity and dynamics. It is important to know the forwards peed of a tornado because that is needed to know when a tornado might reach a location in its path.
The largest tornado ever recorded was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013. This tornado was 2.6 miles wide. Doppler radar measured a wind gust in the tornado at 296 mph, the second highest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado.
The Tornado's max speed is 1,490 mph
No, a tornado is not a form of matter. It is a natural phenomenon in the atmosphere characterized by a rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are composed of air and do not have a physical substance of their own.
The speed at which a tornado can break a tree depends on the intensity of the tornado. Tornado winds can reach speeds of over 300 mph, easily snapping trees at their trunk or uprooting them. Strong tornadoes can cause extensive damage to trees within seconds.
The speed and direction of a tornado can be determined using Doppler radar by measuring how far the tornado moves between sweeps and in what direction.
A Tornado can destroy a village or a small town in a matter of minutes.
at a speed of about 350 km/h
Its is measured by speed,power,andwind speed
it winds and speed
Scientists usually use the severity of the damage a tornado causes to estimate its wind speed.
A tornado with estimated winds of 175 mph is an EF4.