A tornado creates an area of low pressure. Pressure as much as 100 millibars lower than in the surrounding air have been recorded.
Pressure inside a tornado is very low.
A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
Air near the ground spirals inward and upward in and near the tornado.
Air in a tornado, move upward rapidly creating a low pressure at its center. This low pressure essentially sucks air in.
No. Generally the lower the air pressure inside a tornado the faster it rotates.
Air flows into the tornado and forms a rapidly rotating vortex. Inside the tornado air air flows upward. The winds in the tornado are strong enough to damage or destroy structures and vegetation.
Pressure inside a tornado is very low.
The typical temperature during a tornado can vary, depending on the temperature of the air inside the tornado. There have been temperatures recorded as low as 50 degrees and as high as 103 degrees.
You breath in air and perhaps a bit of dust.
No. Air in a tornado rapidly rises in altitude. Air may sink gently in the centers of some tornadoes. As a tornado strikes, air pressure drops rapidly.
A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
Your ears pop when air pressure changes. The pressure inside a tornado is much lower than its surroundings.
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
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.