The highest rating for a tornado is EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale or F5 in the original Fujita Scale.
Winds in these tornadoes can exceed 300 mph.
A tornado can go up a mountain across rivers, and even go out into the the ocean or sea.
up to about 300mph
A tornado is often described as a "force of nature" but in physics it is not a distinct force. Several forces are in operation in and around a tornado.
No, I have never witnessed the destructive force of a cow tornado.
Hi, Well the force is centripetal force during a body is initially attacked by the tornado,when the body started swinging in the tornado from the surface of the earth,the time when body covers some distance from downward to upward is the time when centrifugal force is applied.... That means tornado have both the centripetal force and centrifugal force..... Thanks you!
"When a tornado warning is issued, we should evacuate and go to Auntie Glen's in Virginia." Said Mom.
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Eventually they lose steam and just break up
Yes. Tornadoes can go up and down hills largely unhindered.
The wind in a tornado moves in a circular fashion as it is pulled inward by the pressure gradient force resulting from the low pressure at the center of the tornado.
Objects get sucked up into a tornado due to the low pressure at the center of the vortex, which creates a strong upward suction force. This force can lift and carry debris, dust, and even larger objects into the funnel cloud.
What goes up, must come down. The tornado simply carries stuff downwind and deposits them.