Yes. There have been a few accounts from those who have been inside tornadoes and survived. In recent years two teams of storm chasers have modified SUV's to go inside of tornadoes and both teams have made several successful intercepts. These vehicles are the Tornado Intercept Vehicle (TIV) and the Dominator.
yes! people often go into storms to find how much pressure there is. also, they find out where it is going.
well its 2/10 chance you will the Survivor count though is 34 including a sleeping baby that didn't wake while inside.
Yes. One a few occasions people have survived being picked up and carried by tornadoes, sometimes with only minor injuries.
Though many more people have not survived.
Yes. People have been inside of tornadoes and lived to tell about it.
You will most likely be killed or seriously injured. However, some people have survived being picked up.
only a few
You will be carried to another location and dropped there. Most likely you will not survive.
your animals.
The tornado sucked the car right up into the air. The vortex below those rapids sucked my canoe right out from under me!
Tom and kelly
Dorothy and Toto
Dorothy and Toto
Air is continuously moving up in a tornado. This means that air surrounding the tornado must move in to replace the rising air.
you practically don't go anywhere you just get blown away
In addition to rotating quickly, the wind in a tornado moves upward rapidly as well. Sometimes fast enough to lift objects.
Air in and near a tornado spirals inward and upward very rapidly. The strong winds can pick up objects to carry with them.
A tornado has low pressure at its center and a powerful updraft. As a result air rapidly rushes inward and upward, sometimes carrying things with it.
Because - at the centre of a tornado (or hurricane) is an area of low pressure. Wind is 'sucked' into the centre in an attempt to equalise the pressure.