There is very Low Pressure inside a tornado. Air naturally tends to move towards and area of low pressure.
Air in a tornado, move upward rapidly creating a low pressure at its center. This low pressure essentially sucks air in.
A tornado typically loses strength when cold or dry air undercuts the thunderstorm updraft that drives it. This cuts off the supply of air that power the storm and, in turn, the tornado.
A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
All wind on Earth is ultimately driven by pressure differences. As a general rule, the more the pressure changes over a given distance, the stronger the wind can be. A tornado is a small center of intense low pressure. That pressure drop occurs over a very short distance, which causes air to rush into the tornado rapidly and reach very high speeds in and near the core.
Tornadoes form in the updraft portion of a thunderstorm, where warm, moist air rises.
A tornado has low pressure in it, but it is not considered a low pressure system as it is too small to be its own weather system. The low pressure in a tornado causes the surrounding air to rush into it.
Air in a tornado, move upward rapidly creating a low pressure at its center. This low pressure essentially sucks air in.
The air inside a tornadic thunderstorm (a storm that produces a tornado) does spin. But it is that spinning air that causes the tornado, rather than the tornado starting the air spinning.
Wind shear.
A tornado typically loses strength when cold or dry air undercuts the thunderstorm updraft that drives it. This cuts off the supply of air that power the storm and, in turn, the tornado.
Tornadoes usually weaken if cold or dry air starts feeding into the updraft of the thunderstorm that drives the tornado. This causes the updraft, and thus the tornado, to lose power.
A tornado forms from the rotating updraft of a thunderstorm. The updraft of the tornado creates low pressure that causes air to spiral inward (usually counterclockwise int he northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern) and then upward.
The visible funnel of a tornado is the result of moist air being pulled into the vortex. The low pressure in the tornado causes a temperature drop, which in turn causes the moisture to condense. Temperature continues to drop as the air rises in the tornado, causing more moisture to condense at higher altitudes..
A tornado dies out when the supply of warm air is cut, since they need the warm air to have strength. Sometimes, small tornadoes die out quickly because of their size.
A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
Moist air contains large amounts of water vapor. Water vapor carries large amounts of energy. This energy is what powers a thunderstorm that might produce a tornado
All wind on Earth is ultimately driven by pressure differences. As a general rule, the more the pressure changes over a given distance, the stronger the wind can be. A tornado is a small center of intense low pressure. That pressure drop occurs over a very short distance, which causes air to rush into the tornado rapidly and reach very high speeds in and near the core.