Since tornados are not alien they cant just come to earth so i bet they have been around since there was earth
Tornadoes come from the energy released in a thunderstorm. As powerful as they are, tornadoes account for only a tiny fraction of the energy in a thunderstorm.
No. Tornadoes come from thunderstorms, which form in the air. The tornado itself starts forming several thousand feet above the ground.
Tornadoes demonstrate that Earth's atmosphere can hold quite a bit of energy.
No it does not come from tornadoes . :] .....
Outside of tornadoes the strongest winds on earth occur in hurricanes.
Tornadoes do not come from the earth itself but are formed from severe thunderstorms. They develop when warm, moist air rises rapidly and interacts with cooler, drier air, creating a rotating column of air that descends from a thunderstorm cloud to the ground.
Yes!
Tornadoes happen because there is wind on earth!
Yes. Tornadoes form from the clouds of a thunderstorm.
A supercell tornado is a tornado that forms from the mesocyclone of a supercell. A supercell is the most powerful type of thunderstorm on earth. These storms are characterized by tilted convection and a powerful, rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. Most tornadoes and nearly all strong tornadoes come from supercells.
Tornadoes can cause catastrophic damage to vegetation and man-made structures.
Like all weather events on earth, tornadoes take place within and as a part of earth's atmosphere. They are produced by thunderstorms, which are driven by thermodynamic instability in earth's atmosphere.