The outside of the tornado goes the fastest. When you start to move towards the middle of the tornado, the calmer it gets. The eye of the tornado doesn't even move.
Wind and debris.
The tornado is a twister before it hits the ground, it just spins in the sky, kind of
That is highly variable and there is no single answer. A small but intense tornado can rotate 60 or more times in a minute. At the other end a very large tornado might not even complete a full rotation in a minute, at least on the outside. This if further complicated by the fact that a tornado usually spins faster near its center than at its edges.
Neither. A twister and a tornado are the same thing.
All I know is that if the Gyroscope's wheel is heavier it will precess faster and if it spins faster it will precess slower. But I'm not sure if slower or faster precession creates a more stable gyroscope.
A tornado that spins the opposite direction from normal in its hemisphere is called an anticyclonic tornado.
When a tornado spins faster its winds carry more force, so the tornado can cause more severe damage than it could before. Under some circumstances the increase in speed can trigger a phenomenon called vortex breakdown. In this process air at the center of the tornado begins to sink, forcing the tornado to widen. The collision between outward moving air from the center of the tornado and inflow toward the tornado then results in the formation of a series of smaller vortices within the tornado.
Wind and debris.
The wind in a tornado spins accordingly to the temperature of the air
The drive performs better if it spins faster.
There is no real word that starts with "a" that means tornado. However there is something called an anticyclonic tornado. An anticyclonic tornado is a rare variety of tornado that spins opposite of the normal direction (i.e. it spins clockwise if in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise if in the southern.)
because it twists as it spins
mercury spins faster.
The tornado is a twister before it hits the ground, it just spins in the sky, kind of
because the harder the faster!
honda tornado
That is highly variable and there is no single answer. A small but intense tornado can rotate 60 or more times in a minute. At the other end a very large tornado might not even complete a full rotation in a minute, at least on the outside. This if further complicated by the fact that a tornado usually spins faster near its center than at its edges.