Tornadoes form from strong thunderstorms, which usually require warm, humid weather to form. Temperatures are often in the 80s Fahrenheit when the most dangerous outbreaks occur. However, tornadoes have been documented in temperatures as low as in the 50s.
There is no "exact" temperature for a tornado to form, but it usually happens in hot, humid areas. It all has to do with how heavy the rain and wind is and what direction its going in.
No. You simply get water of an intermediate temperature. Tornadoes are not simply a product of "hot meeting cold." The are a wide variety of factors.
Thermal energy moves spontaneously from hot to cold objects.
Thermal energy
A cold air mas moving into a warm air mass will create a cold front. It is along a cold front that the severe thunderstorms that can produce tornadoes most often form.
Humans can not effect a tornado. Only nature can make a tornado occur. The cold and hot air curl together and form the tornado.
When cold air and hot air mix together it forms a tornado.
Generally not. The storms that produce tornado form more often along cold fronts than warm fronts. So more often the weather is hot before a tornado and cooler afterwards.
most tornadoes form were it is hot and cold climate , tornadoes start by thunderstorms
It would probably cool inside a tornado but not quite cold. Tornadoes form best in warm weather, but due to the rapid pressure drop, a tornado is cooler than its surroundings.
it makes a tornado
it makes a tornado
it makes a tornado
No!
a tornados's is caused by hot and cold weather together
Not directly. When a cold air mass plows into a warm air mass it produces a cold front. Thunderstorms can form along cold fronts. Given a few other conditions these thunderstorms can produce tornadoes.
Its not cold its hot. Its so hot that it is considered to be a form of plasma.