There was never a "Katrina tornado"
Hurricane Katrina first formed on August 23, 2005.
First of all, Katrina was a hurricane, not a tornado. Tornadoes do not have names. And second, no. Hurricane Katrina dissipated seven years ago and can never return. The name Katrina is retired, so no future hurricane will ever have that name.
Yes, Hurricane Katrina and its remnants produced 62 tornadoes in 8 states.
No. Tornadoes do not have names. However there was a Hurricane Katrina.
There is no such things as "a Katrina hurricane." Hurricane Katrina was a particular hurricane that hit the Gulf Coast in 2005. Hurricane Katrina was worse than any tornado on record and deadlier and more destructive than any recorded snowstorm. Katrina was worse than most earthquakes, but not all. Hurricane Katrina killed about 1,800 people. Some earthquakes have had death tolls in the hundreds of thousands.
No. A plane cannot start a tornado.
Yes. A tornado can start on a hill just as easily as it would on a plain.
Tornadoes are typically named based on the location where they occur, rather than given personal names. However, the name "Katrina" is most famously associated with Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast of the United States in 2005. If a tornado was named Katrina, it may have been due to its occurrence during or after the hurricane's impact in the region, or it could have been a reference to the hurricane's devastating effects, though it's important to note that tornadoes generally do not receive individual names like hurricanes do.
yes
Hurricane Katrina did not start in any state, like all hurricanes it started over the ocean. It first made landfall in Florida.
The "fire tornado" forms from the fire; it doesn't really matter how the fire starts. Also, a "fire tornado" is more properly called a fire whirl as it technically isn't a tornado.
Humans cannot start tornadoes.
The first known use of the word "tornado" was in 1556.