Tornadoes can form anywhere!!
A tornado is more likely to travel over a hill than through a valley, as hills can enhance wind speed and rotation in the atmosphere, which can contribute to the formation and sustenance of a tornado. Valleys, on the other hand, may disrupt the tornado's circulation patterns due to the varying terrain and obstacles present.
Tornadoes cannot form in space. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
No!
Yes, it is possible for an F6 tornado to form, although it is extremely rare and not officially recognized by the Enhanced Fujita Scale, which currently only goes up to F5. The conditions required for an F6 tornado to occur would be incredibly intense and destructive.
Yes. It is possible for tornadoes to merge and form a larger tornado, though this is a fairly rare occurrence.
Actually it is called tornado alley. It is the wide strip in the Midwest of the US where tornadoes are most likely to form.
Alley
The tornado is not affected. It will continue though the valley as it would over any other terrain.
The Grand Valley Tornado struck at approximately 4:15pm on May 31st, 1985. It was the longest (on the ground) recorded Tornado in Canadian records.
Tornado Valley - 2009 TV is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:12
Partially. A tornado warning means that a tornado is likely to form or already has formed.
Yes
well i think a tornado can form anywhere
No. A tornado warning means that a tornado is likely to form or has already been spotted.
The official death toll is listed at 15, but analysis suggests that these deaths were actually from two separate tornadoes. The tornado that hit Water Valley killed 8 people, 7 of them in Water Valley. The other 7 deaths, farther to the southwest, were from a tornado that ocurred earlier from the same thunderstorm.
a tornado in the form of fire
No. Tennessee is east of Tornado Alley. Some put it in another tornado forming region called "Dixie Alley."