Tornadoes are usually preceded or shrouded by heavy rain and often by hail.
Tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and often by hail. However, many tornadoes form in a precipitation-free part of the parent thunderstorm.
If you mean a twenty percent chance of precipitation, yes. In some cases a system will produce isolated supercell thunderstorms which have the potential to produce tornadoes. While most places would not see any rain from these storms, there would be the potential for tornadoes.
Tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and are often accompanied by hail.
Tornadoes occur during severe thunderstorms, which produce heavy rain and hail. In simple terms, the precipitation results from large amounts of moisture condensing in the cold air found at high altitudes.
No. Humidity is an important factor in the formation of tornadoes but it is not a direct cause of tornadoes.
Tornadoes do not produce precipitation. Tornadoes are usually often accompanied by precipitation, but the amount is not related to the strength of the tornado.
Tornadoes themselves do not produce precipitation, but the storms that produce them usually do. Tornadoes are often accompanied by rain and hail.
All hurricanes and nearly all thunderstorms produce precipitation. Tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms and so are nearly always accompanied by precipitation, but they do not produce precipitation.
Tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and commonly by hail.
Tornadoes are usually accompanied by rain and often by hail. However, many tornadoes form in a precipitation-free part of the parent thunderstorm.
Yes. Tornadoes occur during thunderstorms that produce rain and often hail.
Thunderstorms can bring tornadoes and heavy precipitation.
The track precipitation and tornadoes
Tornadoes themselves do not cause any precipitation. The storms that produce tornadoes do. These storms produce heavy rain and often produce hail, some of which can be quite large.
No. Tornadoes are a type of violent, rotating wind storm that forms during a thunderstorm. Precipitation occurs when moisture either in solid or liquid form falls from the sky.
Because tornadoes occur during strong thunderstorms they are usually accompanied by rain and often by hail.
No. Many tornadoes form in a rain-free portion of their parent thunderstorms. Some tornadoes form with low-precipitation supercells, which produce little or no rain.