Light damage is the descriptor for an F0 tornado. However stronger tornadoes will also cause light damage in areas that they do not hit head on.
A weak tornado, categorized as EF0 or EF1 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, is likely to cause light damage. These tornadoes have wind speeds between 65-110 mph and can damage trees, signs, and windows, but typically do not cause significant structural damage.
The greatest amount of damage in a tornado is caused by extremely strong winds. Additional damage is from flying debris.
Tornado damaged is caused by a tornado's powerful winds and objects carried y those winds.
The rating on the Fujita or F scale of a tornado is determined by the severity of the damage it causes. Different levels of tornado have different levels of damage severity, ranging from the minor damage of an F0 tornado the the total destruction of an F5.
If you are referring to a tornado that does light damage than yes. These tornadoes can topple trees and overturn trailers which can injure or kill people. If you are referring to a tornado made of light then no such thing exists.
Scientists use the severity of damage that a tornado causes to estimate wind speed.
The F-scale, a measurement used to categorize the intensity of a tornado, is measured on the Fujita scale based on the damage caused by the tornado. The scale ranges from F0 (weakest) to F5 (strongest) and is assigned after a thorough survey of the impacted area to determine the extent of damage to structures.
The Fujita scale uses the severity of the damage a tornado causes to determine its rating.
The Fujita scale uses the severity of damage to determine the strength of a tornado.The Fujita scale rates tornadoes based on the severity of the damage they cause. Scientists examine the damage left by a tornado and determine what level (F0 to F5) best fits it. The overall rating of the tornado comes from the most severe damage it causes.
A rating of EF5 is reserved for the tornadoes that cause the greatest degree of damage.
Generally the stronger the tornado, the more severe the damage it causes. A large tornado can affect a larger area than a small tornado and therefore cause a greater quantity of damage, though it is not necessarily more severe.
fujita scale