There is no particular temperature at which tornadoes happen, but they are most common on hot days and are often followed by a temperature drop.
There is no "exact" temperature for a tornado to form, but it usually happens in hot, humid areas. It all has to do with how heavy the rain and wind is and what direction its going in.
The tornado keeps going without being affected.
The debris will be dropped wherever the tornado looses the power to hold it.
When two tornadoes combine they simply merge to form a larger tornado. Usually it happens when one large tornado absorbs a smaller one.
They merge into 1 tornado
There is no "exact" temperature for a tornado to form, but it usually happens in hot, humid areas. It all has to do with how heavy the rain and wind is and what direction its going in.
No. Because of the sharp pressure drop temperature in a tornado actually decreases.
tornado formation is not based on temperature, but upon storm structure. you cannot use temperature to determine tornados
The area in which the tornado happens can erode the area away cause the animals that lived there to have no home or die of the tornado
The typical temperature during a tornado can vary, depending on the temperature of the air inside the tornado. There have been temperatures recorded as low as 50 degrees and as high as 103 degrees.
That is not known. Few measurements have been taken from inside a tornado and few if any of those included temperature.
The wind in a tornado spins accordingly to the temperature of the air
Outside a tornado air gets pull inward rapidly.
they die
The tornado
Nothing happens. The lightning will not affect the tornado.
Well, if you fly through sky in the tornado your plane will be crushed.