A tornado is wind. Even a relatively weak tornado will produce stronger winds than you would encounter under normal circumstances. Winds in the strongest tornadoes may exceed 300 miles per hour, a speed no other storm on Earth can match. That said, most tornadoes are not that strong; winds in the vast majority are less than 150 miles per hour. Hurricanes and even some severe thunderstorms can produce winds that exceed those of a moderate tornado.
There is no basis for comparison between the two. An iceberg's "strength" is its mass and hardness. A tornado's strength is its wind speed.
A large tornado is typically stronger than a small, skinny tornado. The size of a tornado is often an indication of its strength, with wider tornadoes usually having higher wind speeds and causing more damage. However, other factors such as wind speed, duration, and path can also affect a tornado's strength.
Not necessarily. Higher temperatures do increase the chance of a stronger tornado forming, but not necessarily. Scientists still don't really understand why one storm produces a tornado while another doesn't or why one tornado is stronger than another.
A wind stronger than a tornado is called a derecho. Derechos are widespread and long-lived windstorms associated with fast-moving thunderstorms. They can cause extensive damage with straight-line winds that exceed tornado-strength winds.
In terms of wind speed an EF5 tornado (estimated winds over 200mph, formerly 261-318) is stronger than a category 5 hurricane (over 155 mph). But overall a category 5 hurricane releases more energy.
No ..Fire Is Way Stronger Then Wind
It isn't. An earthquake releases far more energy than a tornado.
In terms of wind speed, tornado and hurricane winds usually fall into the same range. Tornadoes are capable of producing stronger winds than hurricanes are, however. In terms of traveling speed, tornadoes generally move faster but, again, there is a good deal of overlap.
In most cases hurricane winds and tornado wind actually fall into the same range, though tornadoes can achieve much stronger winds. Both hurricanes and tornadoes produce wind as a result of low pressure at the center of the storm. Tornadoes. produce a similar pressure drop to hurricanes, but over a shorter distance, which exerts a greater force.
No. No tornado stronger than F5 has ever been recorded.
The speed of the winds in a tornado is called the tornado's wind speed. It is usually measured using the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, which categorizes tornadoes based on the estimated wind speed. The wind speed can vary greatly depending on the tornado's intensity, with stronger tornadoes having faster wind speeds.
In terms of the energy output, yes.