The lightning can light up the tornado, but nothing else really happens. This is a rather common occurrence as tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
No. While tornadoes and lightning often occur at the same time a tornado cannot be made of lighting, nor are the two directly related. A tornado is a vortex of air; lighting is an electrical discharge.
That means they crash.
it stays the same
yes
possible but it would be weird if he uses lighting and water at the same time would he electrocute him
Lightning frequently accompanies tornadoes anyway. On the unlikely even that a tornado occurred during an earthquake, there would probably be more damage than either of the two could do on their own.
No. While tornadoes and lightning often occur at the same time a tornado cannot be made of lighting, nor are the two directly related. A tornado is a vortex of air; lighting is an electrical discharge.
It frequently does.
Yes, this occurs sometimes during tornado outbreaks.
No. While tornadoes and lightning often occur at the same time a tornado cannot be made of lighting, nor are the two directly related. A tornado is a vortex of air; lighting is an electrical discharge.
The average tornado lasts for 5 to 10 minutes.
It is when to lightning thingys are the same and hit the ground at the same time.
Lightning and wind makes a vortex because the wind creates a spiral figure like a tornado, while the lightning makes it able to travel through time or able to teleport anywhere in space, even in the sun. A vortex is A.K.A as the " tornado in space "
Actually, thunder and lightning DO happen at the same time, but unless you are within the immediate proximity of the lightning strike, the observer usually sees the flash before hearing the thunder because light travels much faster (~11,000,000 mph) than sound (~750 mph).
It is possible but extremely unlikely. If a tornado an earthquake were to strike at the same time it would be purely by coincidence.
Yes, it is possable for four tornadoes to happen at once.
Tornadoes usually happen in the months; April, May, and June.