A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground, often made visible by a funnel cloud.
The formation of tornadoes is complicated.
First, a condition called wind shear, in which the speed or direction of the wind changes with altitude. If the shear is strong enough it can essentially tilt a thunderstorm, this separates the updraft and downdraft of the thunderstorm, preventing them from interfering with one another. This allows the storm to become stronger and last longer.
Additionally, if the wind shear is strong enough it can start the air rolling in what is called horizontal vorticity. This horizontal vorticity can then be turned vertical by a thunderstorm's updraft. When this happens, the thunderstorm may start rotating. The rotation is especially strong in an updraft called a mesocyclone. If the storm intensifies rapidly enough, a relatively warm downdraft called a rear-flank downdraft or RFD can wrap around the bottom part of the mesocyclone. This can then tighten and intensify its rotation and bring it down to the ground to produce a tornado.
It causes tornadoes
Ultimately, the two primary causes of tornadoes are convective instability, which leads to thunderstorms, and wind shear, which gives those storms the rotation they need to produce tornadoes.
Tornadoes come in all seasons but are most common in spring and summer.
Humans do not cause tornadoes. While climate change may affect tornadoes, it is still uncertain how exactly this will play out.
Tornadoes most often form in association with cold fronts.
Tornadoes form in the southern hemisphere for the same reason they form in the northern hemisphere. The mechanics are the same. See the related question for what causes tornadoes
tornadoes do a lot of damage. it can leave people in devistation, cost a lot of money and kill people.
Condensation and wind shear are both needed for tornadoes to form. Tornadoes can form along stationary fronts as well.
The winds in tornadoes are extremely fast. The winds can push against and tear away at objects. Winds in tornadoes often carry flying debris that causes damage on impact.
There are many harmful effects on tornadoes but a couple of examples are destruction of homes, land, and necessities that apply to people. The causes of these natural disasters are the high wind speeds and the location where it strikes.
Tornadoes form when a mesocyclone, a part found in some thunderstorms where air twists and moves upward, gets squeezed into a narrower shape. This causes it to spin faster and reach toward the ground to create a tornado.
In the spring air masses with a large temperature or humidity difference collide frequently. This causes the strong thunderstorms that can spawn tornadoes.