A tornado is essentially a vortex of air. Usually the moisutre in the air in a tornado will condense into water droplets, forming a visible funnel cloud. Tornadoes will often lift soil into the air, forming a dust whirl. If a tornado hits trees or man-made structures it may pick up debris as well.
A tornado is primarily composed of rotating air that forms a violently swirling column extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. This rotating air can reach extremely high wind speeds and is capable of causing significant damage.
No, a tornado is not a form of matter. It is a natural phenomenon in the atmosphere characterized by a rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are composed of air and do not have a physical substance of their own.
Not really. The winds of a tornado carry an enormous amount of force, but the tornado itself is composed almost entirely of air.
I'm sorry I don't ... Matt Hardy only knows that question.
The same gasses that comprise regular air: nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and trace amounts of others.
Tornadoes don't exactly split, but there are multiple vortex tornadoes. A multiple vortex tornado may appear to be composed of several smaller tornadoes but is still in fact one tornado. The process by which this happens is not fully understood, but it begins when a downdraft is forced down the center of the tornado, widening it. If the tornado has the right ratio of rotational speed to vertical speed it can develop a multiple vortex structure.
There is nothing particularly special about the chemical composition of a tornado. It is essentially just made of air, which is mostly made of nitrogen and oxygen with smaller amounts of water vapor (some of which may condense inside the tornado), argon, carbon dioxide, and trace amounts of other gasses.
A tornado is a rapidly rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. It is primarily composed of air in the gaseous state, but it can also carry dust, debris, and water in various states of matter as it moves along its path.
A tornado is made almost entirely of air, with smaller amounts of water, dust and debris. Since air is compressible, a tornado will vary in density depending on temperature, elevation, ambient pressure, and the intensity of the tornado. Generally, density would be between 800 and 1,200 kg/m^3.
tornado in Portuguese is tornado too
No, it is not possible to stop a tornado with another tornado. Tornadoes are formed by specific weather conditions in the atmosphere, and introducing another tornado would not have any effect on the existing tornado.
a tornado?