A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
A tornado is made of matter, mostly air, but it is not a special form of matter.
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.
The funnel of a tornado is condensation, similar to an ordinary cloud. The pressure inside a tornado is quite low. Air that enters a tornado is decompressed and cools as a result. In most cases that air is also rather moist, and the moisture condenses as a result of the cooling. Tornadoes are also made visible by the dust and debris that they pick up.
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.
Air near the ground spirals inward and upward in and near the tornado.
No. By definition a tornado is made of air and there is no air in space.
A tornado is made of air. Air moves into a tornado and spirals upward at high speed.
A tornado cannot actually be made of water. A tornado can occur on water and suck water into it, but it will still be mostly made of air.
Yes. A tornado is a violent vortex of air. It is made visible by water vapor condensing and dust being lifted by the wind.
A tornado is made of matter, mostly air, but it is not a special form of matter.
No, it is a vortex that is made out of a gaseous mixture (air)
No. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. A tornado is often, but not always made visible by a funnel cloud. But the tornado is not the cloud itself.
A tornado is made up of violently rotating air. It often contains moisture that has condensed as well as dust and sometimes debris that the tornado has picked up.
Yes. A tornado is pretty much made of air. Although pressure inside a tornado is low it is nowhere near being a complete vacuum.
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 a natural disaster because it is made up from nature it is the warm air the cold air mixing together so that is nature that is why it is a natural disaster thank you
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.