tornadoes
The Fujita scale is a system of assessing the intensity of tornadoes. Damage is analyzed and the tornado is assigned a rating ranging from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest.
fujita scale now called enhanced fujita scale
The Fujita scale rates the intensity of tornadoes. It does not rate states. Tornadoes of all intensity levels on the Fujita scale, from F0 to F5, have ocurred in Illinois.
No. Hurricanes are classified on the Saffir-Simpson scale. The Fujita scale is used to rate tornadoes.
the fujita scale now called enhanced fujita scale
False. There is no such thing as the Fujitsu scale. The Fujita scale is a system of rating the intensity of tornadoes, not hurricanes. The intensity of hurricanes is measured on the Saffir-Simpson scale.
The Fujita scale is only for tornado intensity. Meteorologists use a different wind scale for hurricanes called the Saffir-Simpson scale.
The Fujita scale uses the damage done by tornadoes to estimate their intensity.
No. The Fujita scale is used to rate the intensity of tornadoes. Hurricanes are rated on the Saffir-Simpson scale.
The Fujita scale is a scale of tornado intensity based on damage to man-made structures and vegetation.
The Fujita scale, or Fujita intensity scale, is a scale used to rate tornado intensity based on the damage caused by a tornado. It ranges from F0 (weakest) to F5 (strongest) and is no longer in use, having been replaced by the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale which takes additional factors into account.
The Fujita scale uses the severity of the damage a tornado causes to determine its rating.