Yes. Although no tornado on record has has traveled further or faster and none in the U.S. has killed more people, some have bee larger.
The Tri-State tornado was about a mile wide at it largest point. The largest tornado on record struck Hallam, Nebraska on May 22, 2004 and was, at one point, 2.5 miles wide.
No. No tornado stronger than F5 has ever been recorded.
have not been found
Yes there has.
No. The widest tornado ever recorded was half that: 2.5 miles wide.
No. The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.5 miles wide, and only a handful of tornadoes over 2 miles wide have ever been recorded. The smallest hurricane ever recorded was 60 miles wide, with most hurricanes being a few hundred miles wide.
No. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air. There is no air in space.
Yes, the state at least gets them every year. There has been at least one tornado in the Bronx.
Yes. Duncanville, Texas was hit by an F2 tornado on April 20, 1977.
Yes, tornadoes have been recorded in every month.
Yes. Much bigger. The eye of a hurricane is larger than the whole tornado in nearly all cases. The eye of a hurricane is usually 20 to 40 miles wide The smallest hurricane eye on record was 2.3 miles wide. Only a few tornadoes have been larger than this. The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.6 miles wide. The typical tornado is 50 to 100 yards wide.
If there ever was one on the lake it would be a water spout not a tornado. Tornadoes are on land not water. A water spout is on the water.
The Average tornado is 50 yards wide, though they tend to be bigger in Tornado Alley. The largest tornado ever recorded in Tornado Alley, or anywhere else for that matter, was the Hallam, Nebraska tornado which was 2.5 miles wide.