Two characteristics of tornadoes are violently rotating winds and intense low pressure.
If two tornadoes come together they merge into one tornado.
When two tornadoes meet, they merge into one tornado.
Much like the nature of tornadoes themselves, the results are unpredictable, and those observed have yielded a variety of results, sometimes ones regarded as fantastic, from two tornadoes combining into one both (or more) tornadoes dissipating, to one dissipating the other, to much more varied effects.
Tornadoes are violent, rotating windstorms that connect to the base of a thunderstorm and to the ground. They are often made visible by a condensation funnel and debris cloud. Tornadoes can be very destructive. In extreme cases winds may exceed 300 mph (480 km/h). While they are more violent than other types of storm, tornadoes are also usually smaller and shorter-lived.
Both tornadoes and lightning are potentially deadly phenomena that occur during thunderstorms. Aside from that they are two completely different things.
Characteristics of tornadoes include very strong, often destructive rotating winds which are often accompanied by a condensation funnel and a debris cloud.
Yes, of course there can be two tornadoes at the same time.
cow hide and water tornadoes
Yes. If two tornadoes collide they will merge to form one tornado.
When two tornadoes merge, it is just called merging; there is no special term.
Tornadoes occur in all twelve months of the year, not just two. May and June are the most active months for tornadoes.
Tornadoes often, though not always, form along weather fronts, where air masses of differing characteristics collide. The fronts that most commonly produce tornadoes are cold fronts and dry lines.
If two tornadoes come together they merge into one tornado.
snow, rain, hail, sunny, thunderstorms, and maybe tornadoes,
There are multivortex tornadoes that at times can look like they are made up of two or more tornadoes
Two thirds of the world's tornadoes happen in the United States, primarily in an area known as Tornado Alley, which includes parts of the central United States such as Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. This region experiences a high frequency of tornadoes due to the clash of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico with cold, dry air from Canada.
There were two weak tornadoes in the sate of Washington in 2010.