Yes. A tornado is a violent weather event.
Tornadoes are produce by strong thunderstorms called supercells. So tornadoes are often accompanied by thunder and lightning, strong winds, heavy rain, and sometimes large hail.
No, although hot weather may result in dust devils it is not directly conducive to tornado formation. Tornadoes need thunderstorms called supercells to form. Tornadic storms and other severe weather form along cold fronts (which cause a temperature drop) more often than warm fronts.
Generally not. The storms that produce tornado form more often along cold fronts than warm fronts. So more often the weather is hot before a tornado and cooler afterwards.
Yes. A tornado is a type of violent weather event.
There is no such thing as "a meteorology". Meterology is the scientific study of weather. A tornado is a weather event.
A tornado is a violent rotating windstorm, making it a weather phenomenon.
The National Weather Service issues a tornado warning when a tornado has been spotted on the ground or indicated by weather radar in your area. This is to alert residents to take immediate shelter and protect themselves from the approaching tornado.
no body invented tornado the tornado just gets formed by weather
Fair weather (non tornadic) waterspouts usually dissipate once they hit land. A tornadic waterspout just continues on land as a regular tornado.
Yes. A tornado is a type of violent windstorm.
Long term predictions about tornadoes are impossible to make. While there is a chance that Frankfort, NY could get a tornado, there is no way of say where or when. The same goes for any location.