A tornado is just one kind of vortex. Vorticies (vortexes) can come in a variety of shapes and sizes and can form in just about any liquid or gas that isn't too viscous.
Tornadoes are vorticies of air that range in size from a few yards to about 2.5 miles in diameter and a few thousand feet to a few miles in height. They produce violent winds capable of causing damage. Some tornadoes have smaller vorticies circling within them. Tornadoes are driven by complicated interactions of air currents within a thunderstorm.
Other vorticies form in a variety of mediums, though on earth the most common are in air and water. They range from tiny eddies a fraction of an inch in size to weather systems and ocean currents thousands of miles across. No other type of vortex on earth can match the intensity of the most violent tornadoes, though the storms on other planets (which are usually enormous vorticies) can.
A multiple vortex tornado has smaller, short-lived vortices moving around inside of it. The suction vortices have stronger winds than the rest of the tornado and are noted for cutting narrow curved swaths of intense damage. A multiple vortex tornado sometimes has the appearance of two or more tornadoes moving circles. A single vortex tornado is simply one vortex of tornadic wind.
A tornado is a kind of vortex, but there are other varieties of vortex with different driving mechanisms. A tornado is a vortex typically a few hundred to a few thousand feet wide that usually comes from a larger but less intense vortex called a mesocyclone, which is the result of a thunderstorm updraft interacting with wind shear. Large scale high and low pressure systems are also vortices driven by the Coriolis effect. You can also see a vortex in a draining pool of water.
A tornado is a vortex made of wind.
A tornado is a very intense vortex of air. Air spirals in towards the low pressure at the center of the tornado and is then drawn upwards. Most tornadoes form from a larger vortex called a mesocyclone, which is part of the updraft of some thunderstorms. At some point this vortex tightens and intensifies to form a tornado.
That depends on the tornado. In a single vortex tornado the most damaging part would be the edge of the tornado's core, analogous to the eye wall of a hurricane. In a multiple vortex tornado, the most damaging part would be the subvotices that orbit within the main circulation of the tornado.
Every tornado is a vortex.
A tornado is itself a kind of vortex, and can have smaller vortices inside of it.
A tornado is a kind of vortex so yes, in some ways.
A tornado is a kind of vortex. Air in a tornado rotates rapidly. Additionally, a tornado may contain multiple smaller vortices.
A multiple vortex tornado has smaller, short-lived vortices moving around inside of it. The suction vortices have stronger winds than the rest of the tornado and are noted for cutting narrow curved swaths of intense damage. A multiple vortex tornado sometimes has the appearance of two or more tornadoes moving circles. A single vortex tornado is simply one vortex of tornadic wind.
A vortex is a spinning or rotating movement in a liquid or gas. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air and thus is a type of vortex.
A tornado is a kind of vortex, but there are other varieties of vortex with different driving mechanisms. A tornado is a vortex typically a few hundred to a few thousand feet wide that usually comes from a larger but less intense vortex called a mesocyclone, which is the result of a thunderstorm updraft interacting with wind shear. Large scale high and low pressure systems are also vortices driven by the Coriolis effect. You can also see a vortex in a draining pool of water.
No country does. A suction vortex is not a tornado; it is a feature that can develop in a tornado. A tornado itself is a vortex but can sometimes contain smaller vortices (vortexes) called suction vortices. Such a storm is called a multiple-vortex tornado.
tornado
A tornado is basically just a vortex of wind
There is no such thing as an actual tornado underwater, as a tornado is, by definition, a vortex of air. However, a vortex underwater is called a whirlpool.
It depends on the tornado. If it is a single vortex tornado the winds near at the edge of the core will be the fastest. However, many of the strongest tornadoes are multivortex, meaning that they have smaller vorticies (almost like mini tornadoes) inside the main vortex. In a multivortex tornado the fastest winds are within these subvortices.