In extremely rare cases winds in a tornado can get a little over 480 km/h.
The most tornadoes have winds under 150 km/h.
The tornado that cause the most severe damage likely have winds of at least 220 km/h.
A point on the Earth's surface moves at approximately(1,670 kilometers per hour) x (cosine of its latitude).-- 1,670 kilometers per hour on the equator.-- 1,446 kilometers per hour at 30° latitude-- 1,181 kilometers per hour at 45° latitude-- 835 kilometers per hour at 60° latitude-- 432 kilometers per hour at 75° latitude-- zero at the poles
It varies widely. A typical tornado lasts a minute or two. Some just last a few seconds. At the other end, some strong tornadoes last for more than an hour. The longest lived tornado on record lasted 3 hours and 29 minutes.
no
Actually the tornado spin is a magic attack. Each character has it's own magic. The Arabian knight and the bear have the tornado. It's their Y magic attack.
No. It is the spinning air that forms a tornado.
Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
Neither; they are the same thing. A tornado is known as a twister because they spin.
365 miles per hour
Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
The air inside a tornadic thunderstorm (a storm that produces a tornado) does spin. But it is that spinning air that causes the tornado, rather than the tornado starting the air spinning.
you have to do a really long jump doge swords that go 6 miles per hour then you have to jump then you spin. or jump up kick back and spin.
you spin the bottle fast and stop