Yes this can be a project because of the water tornado is a mini tornado.
A tornado cannot actually be made of water. A tornado can occur on water and suck water into it, but it will still be mostly made of air.
A tornado that forms on a lake or sea is called a waterspout.
A water spout is a type of tornado that forms over water. It happens when a tornado crosses over a body of water and starts pulling up water into the air. The spinning motion of the tornado creates a funnel-shaped cloud with water droplets.
A tornado in a bottle project uses liquid to simulate the vortex motion of a real tornado. Both involve rotating air masses creating a funnel shape. However, the scale and force of a real tornado are much stronger and destructive than what can be replicated in a bottle.
A tornado over water is called a waterspout.
A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Never. A downspout is completely different from a tornado. It is a pipe that drains water from a rain gutter. A tornado on water is called a waterspout. A tornado that forms without a mesocyclone is a landspout.
Tornadoes and hurricanes are two different things. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
A good hypothesis for a science fair project using a tornado vortex (tornado in a bottle) could be: "If the speed of rotation is increased in a tornado vortex model, then the strength and duration of the vortex will also increase." This hypothesis can be tested by varying the speed at which the bottle is rotated and observing the resulting vortex's characteristics, such as its height, stability, and longevity.
If there ever was one on the lake it would be a water spout not a tornado. Tornadoes are on land not water. A water spout is on the water.
A tornado is called a waterspout anywhere that it forms on water.
A coastal tornado is a tornado that strikes a coastal area. If the tornado moves over water at any point it is called a waterspout for that time.