Tornadoes typically form in a warm air mass, as that is what provides the energy, though it is often near a boundary with a cooler or drier air mass. However, due tot he pressure drop the air in a tornado is cooler than its surroundings.
When cold air and hot air mix together it forms a tornado.
tornado Thermals, caused by hot ground heating the air close above it. Replaced by cold air sinking from above.
No!
Tornadoes themselves are neither hot nor cold; they are rapidly rotating columns of air. However, tornadoes can be associated with both hot and cold weather systems depending on the conditions that give rise to their formation.
Hot air rises and cold air falls.
it makes a tornado
it makes a tornado
A tornado forms
When cold air and hot air mix together it forms a tornado.
When hot and cold air mix, they create convection currents. Hot air rises, displacing the cooler air, which then sinks. This movement of air creates wind and can affect weather patterns.
Humans can not effect a tornado. Only nature can make a tornado occur. The cold and hot air curl together and form the tornado.
tornado Thermals, caused by hot ground heating the air close above it. Replaced by cold air sinking from above.
No. A tornado is a NATURAL disaster, not a man-made one. A tornado is caused when equal amounts of hot and cold air mix together.
tornado Thermals, caused by hot ground heating the air close above it. Replaced by cold air sinking from above.
Air moves from hot to cold.
Well actually there is radiation. Because space is so cold that when the storm forms they both make radiation. Just like hot air and cold air making a tornado.
Not directly. When a cold air mass plows into a warm air mass it produces a cold front. Thunderstorms can form along cold fronts. Given a few other conditions these thunderstorms can produce tornadoes.