Tornadoes are typically produced by thunderstorms called supercells.
Yes, a tornado can come from a thunderstorm. In fact, a tornado cannot be caused by anything other than a thunderstorm. One key facotrs is that the thunderstorm must have a rotating updraft.
A parent thunderstorms is a thunderstorm that produces some other event. This is often used when refering to tornadoes. A storm that produces a tornado is that tornado's parent thunderstorm.
Of these, tornadoes have the shortest duration.
Storms of all kinds are generally associated with low pressure.
A tornado warned storm is a thunderstorm for which a tornado warning has been issued, meaning that the storm is producing rotation that can spawn a tornado.
A supercell is the kind of thunderstorm most likely to produce a tornado.
The rotation in the updraft of a thunderstorm is ultimately what causes a tornado. However, most thunderstorms do not have such rotation.
A thunderstorm will cause a tornado. The thunderstorm clouds are the Cumulonimbus clouds. The majority of thunderstorms that produce tornadoes are in a special class called supercells. These are the most powerful thunderstorms on earth and are noted for having a rotating updraft called a mesocyclone.
A tornado moves with its parent thunderstorm. The storm itself is carried by the winds in the environment it forms in.
A tornado is a violent microscale circulation with a low pressure center and forms from a thunderstorm.
The air inside a tornadic thunderstorm (a storm that produces a tornado) does spin. But it is that spinning air that causes the tornado, rather than the tornado starting the air spinning.
wind shear causes the formation of a tornado if you have a strong thunderstorm.
Yes, a tornado can come from a thunderstorm. In fact, a tornado cannot be caused by anything other than a thunderstorm. One key facotrs is that the thunderstorm must have a rotating updraft.
Tornadoes usually form from a kind of thunderstorm called a supercell.
Yes. In fact a thunderstorm is the only thing that can cause a tornado.
Tornadoes usually weaken if cold or dry air starts feeding into the updraft of the thunderstorm that drives the tornado. This causes the updraft, and thus the tornado, to lose power.
Tornadoes are most often associated with a kind of thunderstorm called a supercell.