If two tornadoes meet, they will merge to form one tornado.
The explosion would probably disrupt the tornado. However, the effects of the blast and fallout would likely be worse than anything the tornado could do. Even then, the parent thunderstorm may still go on to produce another tornado.
It becomes a tornado, obviously.
The most likely outcome of a tornado is damage to property and vegetation.
I think you should try there are many video showing how to make a tornado in a bottle. Do the experiment and add the marble in there and see what happen.
The lightning can light up the tornado, but nothing else really happens. This is a rather common occurrence as tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
You will be carried to another location and dropped there. Most likely you will not survive.
There was a tornado in Springfield, Massachusetts on June 1, 2011. If there is another event you have in mind please be more specific.
No, it can not happen. You will always need a cloud to form a tornado. The kind of cloud that a tornado uses is a cumulonimbus cloud.
A tornado can hit a house, but cannot happen indoors.
No, you cannot stop a tornado with another tornado. The two tornadoes would simply merge and form a larger tornado.
in tornado alley which is in Texas and states close to it
No most tornado strikes happen in the Midwest in tornado valley but they can happen any where but mainly in middle March to early October
When two tornadoes meet they merge to form a larger tornado. This is an unusual occurrence, but when it does happen it usually involves a large tornado absorbing a smaller one.
There is not such thing as a "chemical tornado" a tornado is the result of thermodynamic physical processes.
Another name for a tornado is a twister.
The explosion would probably disrupt the tornado. However, the effects of the blast and fallout would likely be worse than anything the tornado could do. Even then, the parent thunderstorm may still go on to produce another tornado.
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.