Yes, wind near a tornado spirals in towards the tornado.
The actual maximum wind speed for a tornado is not known. The strongest wind ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph.
The wind moves in a spiral fashion, moving rapidly toward the center of the tornado in a cyclonic fashion, meaning counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern. In the core of the tornado this wind takes on a more circular pattern. In addition to the spiral movement, wind in a tornado moves rapidly upwards. There may be fairly calm area of sinking air at the center of some tornadoes. In these tornadoes, a series of smaller whirlwinds can sometimes develop inside the tornado. These spinning columns of air circle the tornado's center, moving with the rotation.
A tornado is a vortex made of wind.
In rare cases wind speeds in a tornado can exceed 300 mph (480 km/h).
The wind speed of a tornado is inferred from the severity of the damage it inflicts.
If a tornado is coming a wind vane will probably point away from the storm as the wind itself is moving toward it as inflow
The air pressure in a tornado is lower than that outside the tornado. That is why the wind blows toward the funnel.
Convergent winds are winds that move toward something, such as a hurricane or tornado.
Neither is faster than the other. A twister and a tornado are the same thing.
The actual maximum wind speed for a tornado is not known. The strongest wind ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph.
The wind moves in a spiral fashion, moving rapidly toward the center of the tornado in a cyclonic fashion, meaning counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern. In the core of the tornado this wind takes on a more circular pattern. In addition to the spiral movement, wind in a tornado moves rapidly upwards. There may be fairly calm area of sinking air at the center of some tornadoes. In these tornadoes, a series of smaller whirlwinds can sometimes develop inside the tornado. These spinning columns of air circle the tornado's center, moving with the rotation.
A tornado is a vortex made of wind.
A tornado IS wind- very fast winds spinning in a circle.
The whirling wind forms a tornado.
In rare cases wind speeds in a tornado can exceed 300 mph (480 km/h).
The strong wind in a tornado is the source of its destructive potential.
Yes, in simplest terms a tornado is a vortex of very strong wind.