It has recently been found that there are vortices on the sun that superficially resemble tornadoes, but they are not true tornadoes.
No. There are enormous, magnetically-driven vortices of plasma on the sun that have been compared to tornadoes. However, these are not true tornadoes as they operate on entirely different mechanics.
True. Doppler radar can detect tornadoes.
Tornadoes follow a predictable pattern of formation and dissipation.
Enormous vortices have been observed on the sun that resemble tornadoes. They have been called "solar tornadoes" but they are not tornadoes by the meteorological definition.
That is true; these gullies have been seen by Mars landers.
Tornadoes can occur anywhere in the world, except Antarctica. The UK has seen its share of tornadoes, although most have been under the F1 damage level. Tornadoes are less likely in England, but are still possible. The largest tornado in England was probably the London Tornado of 1091. The death toll was unknown.
Yes. The state has seen a number of major outbreaks with tornadoes as strong as F4.
yes there has been reports of tornadoes in Belize
True
True
There have been many thousands of tornadoes in the United states. This country averages over 1000 tornadoes every year.