That is not known. Not enough measurements have been taken.
That is not known. Not enough measurements have been taken from inside a tornado.
The air inside a tornado is cooler than its surroundings. This is not due to the wind or the fact that it comes from the sky, but from the fact that the pressure in a tornado is low. As air enters a tornado it is decompressed rapidly, and cools as a consequence. This is predicted by gas laws. In many cases the temperature inside a tornado is less than the dew point, which is why the funnel forms.
The warm, moist air involved in tornado formation usually comes from a warm body of water. For the United States it is usually the Gulf of Mexico.
Considering that you shouldn't go outside during a tornado, yes. You are much safer inside.
Air density inside a tornado is about 5-10% less than that of the air surrounding it.
It varies, but tornadoes usually form in warm weather and are followed by a temperature drop. This is because warm air has more energy to power the storms that produce tornadoes. The temperature near the tornado may be a bit lower as the air will likely have been cooled somewhat by rain. There would be another temperature drop inside the tornado itself as a result of the pressure drop.
The only cloud you will actually find inside a tornado is the condensation funnel. Other clouds, such as the wall cloud and cumulonimbus are outside the tornado itself.
A tornado's funnel cloud forms when warm, moist air rises rapidly and creates a rotating column of air. This spinning motion causes the air to condense into a funnel shape, which is visible as the iconic tornado funnel cloud.
A tornado is poweered by the thunderstorm that porduces it. This storm is fueled by warm, moist air.
pressure.
Warm climates .
No. Trying to get a piacture from inside a tornado would be very dangerous and not worth the risk,