Scientists track tornadoes and storm likely to produce tornadoes using Doppler Radar and eyewitness reports. Long-term forecasts over the course of hours and days, which include assessing tornado risk, are done using a wide variety of weather data from weather stations, weather balloons, and satellites all processed by supercomputers.
Doppler weather radar is used to monitor tornadoes.
Scientists track tornadoes using Doppler radar and reports from eyewitnesses.
Since tornadoes and hurricanes are weather phenomena they are studied by meteorologists, or weather scientists.
Tornadoes are tracked using eyewitness reports and Doppler radar, which can detect wind and rotation in a thunderstorm.
There is no specific word for a scientist who studies tornadoes. Such scientists would fall under the general label of meteorologists; weather scientists.
Not real tornado. Scientists have produces small vortices in labs that resemble tornadoes, and have simulated tornadoes in supercomputers, but they cannot create real tornadoes.
Doppler weather radar is used to monitor tornadoes.
Scientists track tornadoes using Doppler radar and reports from eyewitnesses.
Currently, none. Most scientists have acknowledged that it is impossible to prevent tornadoes.
Scientists follow tornadoes to track where they are going and warn people in their paths. They also study tornadoes to learn more about them so they can be better predicted.
No.
Since tornadoes are a form of weather, the scientists who study tornadoes are weather scientists of meteorologists.
no
People who study tornadoes are a type of meteorologist.
Nothing. Tornadoes are a natural phenomenon. We cannot change their nature.
Dugongs are tagged with tracking devices, this is done for that scientists can monitor their population and keep tract of the dugongs
Scientists are studying the storms that produce tornadoes, looking for indicators of tornado development that could give earlier warnings.