It varies. A typical tornado might travel about 5 kilometers. However, many tornadoes have path lengths of less than a kilometer. In rare cases a tornado may have a path lengths of 200 kilometers or more. The longest path ever recorded for a tornado was 352 kilometers.
It varies widely. Most tornadoes travel 5 to 10 kilometers before dissipating. It is not uncommon for a tornado to have a path length of less than a kilometer while in some extreme cases a tornado can travel hundreds of kilometers. The greatest known distance a tornado has traveled is 352 kilometers.
It varies widely. Some tornadoes travel less than a kilometer. A typical path might by 5 to 10 kilometers. Not very many tornadoes will travel more than 50 kilometers, however there are extreme cases. A handful of tornadoes have been recorded with paths over 300 kilometers long, with the record path length being 352 kilometers.
250 millimeters=0.00025 kilometers
The average tornado damage path is 8 kilometers long and 45 meters wide. Some damage paths are less than 100 meters long, The longest tornado damage path on record is 352 kilometers, the widest is 4 kilometers.
25 kilometers
It varies widely. The average tornado is on the ground for about 8 kilometers. But some tornadoes are only on the ground for a few meters. At the other end, other tornadoes have had damage paths hundreds of kilometers long. The longest tornado damage path on record is 352 kilometers.
Yes. A tornado that travels a kilometer would not be uncommon. Such a path length would be typical of a weak tornado. The more destructive tornadoes that get national or international coverage typically travel much further, sometimes dozens of kilometers and can be well over a kilometer wide, in rare cases several kilometers wide.
I assume you mean kilometers per hour as a kilometer is a unit of distance, not speed. Tornadoes vary greatly in speed. They may be stationary or travel at more than 100 km/h. A typical tornado travels at about 50 km/h.
About 12 kilometers
620.8kilometres
299,792.458
Tsunamis can travel at the speed of a jetliner in the open ocean about 800 km/h. In slightly deeper water so it is going slightly faster and catches up. ... In the deep ocean a tsunami can travel at more than 800 kilometres per hour close to the speed ... sometimes the fifth o? Regards Sathya