Damage can range from Minor roof damage and broken tree limbs in a very weak tornado to the complete obliteration of well built structures. For more details see the link below.
A tornado can do all sorts of damage...from just shattering the widows and ripping off the roof to completely distroying and area.And it also depends on how many tornados there are!!
The Waco tornado was an F5, meaning that houses were completely destroyed with some of the swept clean off their foundations.
Not much unless it touches down, in which case it is called a tornado.
Even the largest tornadoes are not large enough to damage a city. There is no specific kind of tornado that would cover a large portion of a city, though one term used is "wedge." A wedge tornado is a tornado that appears wider than it is tall.
The force that drives the winds of a a tornado is a pressure gradient; the pressure inside a tornado is lower than it is outside. Most of the damage caused is created by the wind acting on structures. Some damage is also cased by the impact of debris carried by the wind.
"Light damage" is the term used to describe the damage caused by an F0 tornado.
it depends on the tornado damage
Most damage in a tornado is caused by the extremely fast winds.
The longest tornado damage path on record is 219 miles.
There is no difference. A tornado and a twister are the same thing.
The damage is surveyed and where damage boundaries are is noted. This is the used to show how wide the tornado is. Note that the size is not a factor in how the tornado is rated but how intense the damage is.
Unfortunately there is no way to prevent tornado damage, but it can be reduced with improved building standards.