Tornadoes contribute to the role that their parent thunderstorms play in transporting warm, moist air upward.
No. Tornadoes do not damage the atmosphere.
Tornadoes, as a product of thunderstorms, help stabilize the atmosphere by moving warm air upward.
The thermosphere is a layer of the Earth's atmosphere far above the troposphere where tornadoes occur. Tornadoes are a result of intense thunderstorms in the lower atmosphere and are not influenced by conditions in the thermosphere.
No. Tornadoes and hurricanes are atmospheric phenomena, and there is no atmosphere in space.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy vegetation and property and can kill and injure people and animals.
Tornadoes primarily affect the spheres of the atmosphere and the geosphere. In the atmosphere, tornadoes are intense rotating columns of air that can cause significant damage. On the geosphere, tornadoes can impact the land by destroying buildings, uprooting trees, and altering the landscape.
Lower levels of the atmosphere.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air and therefore part of the atmosphere.
The devil did not create tornadoes. Tornadoes form from complex interactions in the atmosphere, not any supernatural entity.
Tornadoes demonstrate that Earth's atmosphere can hold quite a bit of energy.
Tornadoes typically form in the lower atmosphere, specifically within the troposphere. This is where most of Earth's weather occurs, and tornadoes develop within severe thunderstorms that extend from the surface up into the lower troposphere.
Tornadoes affect people by damaging and destroying property and by killing and injuring the people themselves.