"Light damage" is the term used to describe the damage caused by an F0 tornado.
It's caused by wind going in circular motion.
The strength of a tornado is determined by the damage it does to man-made structures and vegetation. When a structure takes damage from a tornado, the degree of damage, the type of structure, and its quality of construction are used to estimate the strength of the winds that caused that damage. This is then used to sort the tornado into one of six intensity categories of the Enhanced Fujita Scale, ranging from EF0 at the weakest to EF5 at the strongest.
a convex mirror
The energy of a tornado is kinetic energy.
No one really know pressure can vary for the type or category of a tornado.
It's caused by wind going in circular motion.
Low pressure.
Engineers examine the damage, taking into account the type of structure and the quality of construction, and estimate what wind speeds would be needed to cause that damage. That wind speed is then used to assign a rating on the Enhanced Fujita scale. The highest-rated damage on the tornado's path will be the tornado's rating.
The strength of a tornado is determined by the damage it does to man-made structures and vegetation. When a structure takes damage from a tornado, the degree of damage, the type of structure, and its quality of construction are used to estimate the strength of the winds that caused that damage. This is then used to sort the tornado into one of six intensity categories of the Enhanced Fujita Scale, ranging from EF0 at the weakest to EF5 at the strongest.
some type of brain damage to the head
A dormant one.
Tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms, which are generally associated with low pressure systems.
Depending on the type of structure and the strength of the tornado damage can range from roof damage and broken windows to the complete destruction of well-built structures.
You probably mean an EF0 tornado, then there is no given size. Tornadoes are rated based on the type of damage done, which is used to estimated wind speed. A tornado that causes little or no damage and has estimated peak winds of 65-85 mph is rated EF0 regardless of size. However, EF0 tornadoes are usually, but not always, relatively small, typically less than 200 yards wide.
Tornadoes are a a phenomenon of weather, not geology. Their occurrence has nothing to do with plate boundaries.
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Light