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.
"Light damage" is the term used to describe the damage caused by an F0 tornado.
The greatest amount of damage in a tornado is caused by extremely strong winds. Additional damage is from flying debris.
The F-scale or Fujita sclae rates tornado from F0 to F5 based on damage. An F0 causes light damage or no damage at all. F5 damage is total destruction.
A hurricane
Tornado damaged is caused by a tornado's powerful winds and objects carried y those winds.
The eye of a tornado itself most likely does not do damage as radar analysis and eyewitness testimony show that they eye of a tornado is calm like the eye of a hurricane. The wind and debris surrounding the eye is what causes damage.
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.
In most cases the wind speed of a tornado is estimated based on the severity of the damage it causes.
Scientists use the severity of damage that a tornado causes to estimate wind speed.
The weakest category of tornado is EF0 on the Enhanced Fujita scale, which runs from EF0 to EF5. EF0 wind estimates range from 65 to 85 mph. An EF0 tornado causes light damage.
True tsunamis are larger and more damage.