A green sky doesn't necessarily indicate tornadoes, nor are tornadoes always accompanied by a green sky. Tornadoes form during severe thunderstorms. Generally speaking, the stronger a thunderstorm is, the taller it is and the more moisture it holds. The large amounts of condensed moisture refract light, separating out the different colors. This, combined with the fact that tornadoes often occur in the late afternoon when the sun is low can lead unusual lighting conditions, and make the clouds appear green, blue, or yellow.
There is no single color associated with tornadoes. The sky will often have the typical gray of storm clouds. However, in some instances the clouds may appear black, green, yellow, or blue. Even when such cloud colors do occur, they do not necessarily indicate a tornado, just that the storm is intense.
The thickness and height of the clouds causes them to turn gray. Other clouds appear white because they are thinner and let light through.
well a little chemical called chloraform goes into the air causes the evaporating water to turn into fireballs but its too cold for the fireballs and they freeze and turn into water
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..
The rotation originate from the speed and direction of the wind changing with altitude. This sets air rolling horizontally. This horizontal rolling can be turn vertical by the updraft of a thunderstorm. This can then tighten and intensify to form a tornado.
There is no single color associated with tornadoes. The sky will often have the typical gray of storm clouds. However, in some instances the clouds may appear black, green, yellow, or blue. Even when such cloud colors do occur, they do not necessarily indicate a tornado, just that the storm is intense.
what causes hands to look green
The thickness and height of the clouds causes them to turn gray. Other clouds appear white because they are thinner and let light through.
rain: the clouds collect eough water from the ocean to the clouds and the clouds get too heavy and have to fall down. hail: the water from the clouds get frozen and turn into snow
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.
No, the sky will usually turn very darkish and the clouds will be moving fast. A pink sky during a storm probably just means that the sun is setting.
The water becomes a gas and then they turn into clouds. Then it rains the water out the clouds. THATS THE WATER LIFE CYCLE!
The thunderstorm might go down and turn into a tornado and then when it hits the ocean it might turn into a hurricane
lack of nitrogen
well a little chemical called chloraform goes into the air causes the evaporating water to turn into fireballs but its too cold for the fireballs and they freeze and turn into water
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..
It isn't the Gluecose that make the leaves turn green , its the Chlorophyll.