When you flip the bottle you impart some circulation into the bottle. As water gets pulled in towards the hole at the bottom of the bottle this circulation speeds up through the conservation of angular momentum. The draining water and vortex enhance one another until it forms a "tornado."
to make a tornado in a bottle you can 1. spin a single bottle full of liquid or 2. spin 2 two liter bottles atttatched to each other at the mouth with duct tape. No lids
Both the tornado in bottle and a real tornado involve a vortex that strengthens via the principle of conservation of angular momentum.
Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
The vast majority of tornadoes in the northern hemisphere spin counterclockwise. Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
There is no such thing as an EF6 tornado. Estimated winds for an EF5 tornado start at just over 200 mph and have no upper bound.
you spin the bottle fast and stop
to make a tornado in a bottle you can 1. spin a single bottle full of liquid or 2. spin 2 two liter bottles atttatched to each other at the mouth with duct tape. No lids
The air will rise into the upper bottle in bubbles while the water splatters and drips down into the lower bottle. No vortex is formed.
no not really. To make a tornado in a bottle fill it up with water and add some food coulering to see it. newt just seal the cap and spin
Tornado
It's 'spin the bottle' It's 'spin the bottle' It's 'spin the bottle' It's 'spin the bottle'
tornado
Wind moving in two directions over a prairie makes air in the middle spin. This is the beginning of a tornado.
play spin the bottle play spin the bottle
it is a bottle shape
If you mean a hurricane in a bottle then yes, a hurricane in a bottle and a tornado in a bottle are the same thing. In shape, however, the vortex bears more resemblance to a tornado than a hurricane.
Spin the bottle is usually done in parties but anywhere is fine.