In most cases the dust and condensation in the tornado would make it impossible to see much of anything. However in some cases the inside of a tornado looks like a hollow tube.
There are multivortex tornadoes that at times can look like they are made up of two or more tornadoes
When tornadoes are approaching they look like huge funnels. Tornadoes can approach an area very quickly You are advised to leave an hour before you can see the storm.
Yes. Tornadoes are not uncommon in the midwest.
Yes. Tornadoes, especially strong ones, are most common in the middle latitudes.
Tornadoes look like funnels of wind, starting small where it touches the ground and growing bigger as it reaches the sky. They would have dirt, grass, wood, anything it picks up swirling inside it.
it depends on what the radar is measuring, but usually it will look something like an animal cell, with the tornado being the nucleus.
Look like a animals.
Tornadoes do form in deserts, but very rarely. Deserts often see whirlwinds called dust devils. They look like tornadoes but are weaker and form on sunny days while tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
No. Tornadoes need thunderstorms to form. There are little whirlwinds called dust devils, however. They look somewhat like tornadoes but are much weaker and usually harmless.
it depends on what the radar is measuring, but usually it will look something like an animal cell, with the tornado being the nucleus.
Like a desert!
Yes. Many tornadoes do have a calm center similar to the eye of a hurricane.