Wikipedia's article on the Fujita scale provides a good table with pictures of the damage at each level.
by scale called the fujita scale or (enhanced fujita scale) to measure intensity or strength of a tornado based on the severity of damage.
An "F0" category according to the Fujita scale or the EF0 category on the Enhanced Fujita scale.
Yes. The Fujita scale uses the damage a tornado does to determine its intensity and assign a rating on a scale ranging from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest.
The Fujita scale is also known as the 'F Scale' it measures the strength of a tornado on a scale of F-0 to F-5. F5 is the strongest and most damaging
166 to 200mph on the enhanced fujita scale 207 to 261 on the regular fujita scale
The Greensburg tornado was an EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, which is equivalent to an F5 on the original Fujita Scale.
The Fujita scale is named after the scientist who invented it: Dr. Tetsuya Theodore Fujita.
fujita scale now called enhanced fujita scale
The Pampa, Texas tornado of June 8, 1995 was an F4 on the Fujita scale.
The strongest tornado in the Fujita scale is F5.
by scale called the fujita scale or (enhanced fujita scale) to measure intensity or strength of a tornado based on the severity of damage.
The highest rating a tornado can attain in the Fujita scale is F5.
the fujita scale now called enhanced fujita scale
The Fujita scale uses the severity of the damage a tornado causes to determine its rating.
The most common Fujita scale rating is F0 (EF0 on the Enhanced Fujita scale).
Fujita released the scale in 1971, but much of the development was based on a detailed survey of the Lubbock, Texas tornado of 1970.
The most powerful category of tornado is F5 on the Fujita scale or EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale.