For a massive wedge tornado, anything short of a nuclear bomb would probably not do much. A nuclear bomb would probably disrupt it, but at the same time would cause far more damage than the tornado itself could.
On the afternoon of Monday, May 20, 2013, a large and extremely powerful oklahoma tornado happen.
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.
There is no reason why it should explode. The gravity that holds it together is way too strong.
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.
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.
it exploded
you would die!
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.