The damage from a microburst appears to radiate out from the center while tornado damage occurs along the path that the tornado took. In a microburst trees fall or are bent outwards, with trees that neighbor each other generally falling in the same direction. In a tornado downed trees to not have the same order, and fall in multiple directions. Those left leaning may hint towards an inward or rotating flow. Some tornadoes have roughly crescent shaped areas of more severe damage, indicating a multivortex structure.
No, you cannot stop a tornado with another tornado. The two tornadoes would simply merge and form a larger tornado.
No. Damage is the basis of tornado ratings, but not for hurricanes. Hurricanes are rated based on maximum sustained wind speed.
In a tornado, property can be damaged or destroyed and people and animals may be killed or injured.
A tornado emergency is a special kind of tornado warning that is issued when a large tornado is threatening a populated area. A tornado emergency indicates a more dangerous situation than an ordinary tornado warning.
Miniature tornado may refer to a tornado that is smaller than normal or a small whirlwind such as a dust devil that resembles a tornado.
In a tornado the winds move inwards and upwards in a circular fashion. In a downburst the wind travels downwards and outwards in straight lines. Also, unlike a downburst, a tornado travels across the ground, producing a path of damage.
Not really. Both a tornado and a downburst are high-wind events that occur during a thunderstorm, but that is where the similarity ends. A tornado is a violently rotating vortex of wind in which air spirals inward and then upward. They are often made visible by a distinct condensation funnel. They can produce far stronger winds than a downburst. A downburst is an intense straight-line wind event in which rain-cooled air travels rapidly downward and outward with no significant rotation. There is no condensation funnel.
A tornado harms anyone who is or has property in the the path.
by their windspeed
The strong winds in a tornado are causes by the steep pressure gradient surrounding it, with intense low pressure at the tornado's center. Strong winds in thunderstorms are usually caused by rain cooled air falling rapidly to ground level in an even called a downburst.
The most likely outcome of a tornado is damage to property and vegetation.
The winds of a tornado can severely damage or destroy property. Flying debris, collapsing buildings, and falling trees can cause injury or death.
Tornadoes destroy property and money must be used to restore property.
It depends. A tornado can cause property damage in a matter of seconds, but in a large, slow moving tornado, structures can be exposed to damging winds for several minutes. A very violent tornado can completely obliterate a well built house in under 3 seconds.
After we did nothing
Massive, I suggest you try to stop it
Yes a tornado can cause property damage ranging from minor roof damage and loss of gutters and siding to complete destruction of well-constructed buildings.