No. A tornado is defined as a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. The vortex in a tornado tube may rotate, but it meets none of the other criteria.
its called the tornado tube
Craid Burnham
the waco tornado
in puppy land
Both the tornado in bottle and a real tornado involve a vortex that strengthens via the principle of conservation of angular momentum.
No
Because if there is a real tornado you will now what to do.
wrong, the real answer to this question is tornado
The Greensburg, Kansas tornado of May 4, 2007 was definitely a real event. It was the first tornado to be rated EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale. This enormous tornado destroyed 95% of the town of Greensburg, killing 11.
There is no real term for the tip of a tornado. A small area of intense suction in a tornado may be referred to as a suction spot.
An F5 tornado, now EF5 since the scale changed of 2007.
No, fortunately I have not seen an EF5 tornado, that is in real life So, Yeah