Tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and are often accompanied by hail.
Cumulonimbus, because a cumulonimbus cloud is involved in almost all types of precipitation and other intense weather,
The eye of a tornado is extremely calm and bears no resemblence to all the mayhem that the tornado causes to the outside world.
well, they collect all together in the cloud and when it is full enough it all drops as precipitation
The air does get sucked upward in a tornado, but a tornado does not create a complete vacuum, if that's what you mean.
I have read a few books and they all say that the big red storm is a hurricane.
Yes. All tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
Yes. Many people in tornado-prone regions have storm cellars or, in more recent years, an above-ground storm shelter. Though not all do.
A thunderstorm that produces a tornado is called a tornadic storm. All tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
1. They all come from clouds. 2. They all are formed by precipitation.
yes
No, the approaching storm cloud sucks in air from all sides.
A tornado effects the world, in many ways. Firstly, it can effect people, the environment, animals etc. Since a tornado is a really dangerous type of storm with all different kinds of harmful bacteria.
Neutralization, Double decomposition, Alkylation, Counterion Exchange, Precipitation are all different types of double displacement reactions.
All are potentially dangerous types of storm that can produce strong winds and derive their energy from warm, moist air. It should be noted that tornadoes need thunderstorms in order to form.
Both are, but it is probably more likely with a tornado.
Ethiopia
In the United States, the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma issues tornado watches for all locations.