No, the approaching storm cloud sucks in air from all sides.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air. Air is a mixture of gasses. However, a tornado will also often contain liquid droplets and solid particles, though it is still mostly air.
The air pressure in a tornado is lower than that outside the tornado. That is why the wind blows toward the funnel.
tornado
The tornado itself is a whirling circular mass of air. Condensation of water droplets at the tornado's core forms the funnel.
The air pressure inside a tornado is very low.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air. Air is a mixture of gasses. However, a tornado will also often contain liquid droplets and solid particles, though it is still mostly air.
Yes.
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 made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
An F5 Tornado is the most powerful category of tornado possible. This tornado pulls well-built homes off their foundations and into the air before shredding them and wiping the foundation clean.
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
Tornadoes are associated with low pressure systems. Therefore, pressure will drop in the time leading up to a tornado.
Air is continuously moving up in a tornado. This means that air surrounding the tornado must move in to replace the rising air.
No. By definition a tornado is made of air and there is no air in space.
The air pressure drops sharply in a tornado
No. It is the spinning air that forms a tornado.
A tornado is made of air. Air moves into a tornado and spirals upward at high speed.