There is not particular temperature at which tornadoes form. It is common, however, for the weather to be hot and humid before a tornado and its parent thunderstorm come through and to be cooler afterwards.
Thunderstorms and tornadoes, whether they are quick or not, are the product if cumulonimbus clouds.
Temperature, Doppler radar, and wind direction are some of the types of information used to predict tornadoes.
In the spring air masses with a large temperature or humidity difference collide frequently. This causes the strong thunderstorms that can spawn tornadoes.
Since tornadoes are a product of severe thunderstorms they are generally associated with arm weather, though tornadic storms are often followed by a drop in temperature.
No. Tornadoes cannot form during very cold weather.
There is not particular temperature at which tornadoes form. It is common, however, for the weather to be hot and humid before a tornado and its parent thunderstorm come through and to be cooler afterwards.
Tornadoes are produced by very strong thunderstorms.
It depends on the region, but tornadoes are most common in the spring and summer.
Thunderstorms and tornadoes, whether they are quick or not, are the product if cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes are most often spawned by a type of storm called a supercell.
Variations in temperature often play a role in the formation of tornadoes, but they are not the only factor.
Water tornadoes, properly called waterspouts, form best when the water temperature is higher than the air temperature.
Tornadoes do not occur at any particular temperature. However, they do generally require warm weather.
True
Tornadoes are not controlled. Tornadoes are influenced by temperature, humidity, wind, and air pressure, wind interact in complex ways.
From 2000 through 2011 there were 669 confirmed tornadoes in Iowa. In addition there is a preliminary count of 16 tornadoes so far in 2012 (as of December 6). This brings the total to 685 tornadoes.
No. Tornadoes usually form over land, not water, so water temperature isn't really a factor.