The average tornado is 50 yards wide and about 5,000 feet tall.
In some cases a tornado may be less than 10 yards wide. In extreme cases a tornado can be over 2 miles aide and over 60,000 feet tall.
The National Weather Service website priides the most reliable information.
Temperature, Doppler radar, and wind direction are some of the types of information used to predict tornadoes.
Tornadoes are not rated by size, they are rated by how severe the damage is from EF0 to EF5. For example if a tornado hits a town, destroying trailers and tearing off roofs but no worse, it is rated EF2, regardless of its size. Although tornadoes with higher ratings tend to be larger, this is not always the case.
They form they same way as other tornadoes do. See the link below for information on how tornadoes form in general.
Yes. Tornadoes vary greatly in size and shape, ranging from narrow and threadlike spin-ups, to massive cones and vertical columns, to enormous wedge tornadoes that appear wider than they are tall.
The Tornadoes website offers a variety of information about tornadoes. These include: types and categories of tornadoes, weather conditions that signify tornadoes forming, and safety tips.
Tornadoes are rated based on the severity of the damage they cause, which is used to estimated wind speed. Although strong tornadoes tend to be larger, size is not an actual factor in rating tornadoes.
By how strong the tornado is. Even though strong tornadoes tend to be larger how strong a tornado is does not determine its size. Relatively weak tornadoes have been very large and extremely strong tornadoes have been relatively small.
The National Weather Service website priides the most reliable information.
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Most tornadoes are just a few yards wide when they touch down and grow to 50 to 100 yards wide at peak size.
No. Hurricanes and tornadoes are two different types of storm. Size is not the only difference.
No. Tornadoes vary greatly in strength, size, duration, speed of travel, and appearance.
Temperature, Doppler radar, and wind direction are some of the types of information used to predict tornadoes.
Surprisingly, the Wikipedia page titled "Tornadogenesis" offers a good explanation of how tornadoes form.
No. Waterspouts are generally smaller than most tornadoes. Though a few are in the same size range that tornadoes typically fall into.
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