extreme low pressure
The eye of a tornado is a relatively calm area that can sometimes be found at the tornado's center, similar to the ey of a hurricane.
A tornado's center, or "eye," is actually found in hurricanes, not tornadoes. In a tornado, the most intense winds and destruction are located in the center of the funnel cloud. This is where the rotation is strongest and where the most damage is typically inflicted.
The "eye" of a tornado is at the center of the funnel.
The center of a tornado is called the "eye" or "eyewall." It is a relatively calm area with lower wind speeds compared to the strong winds in the surrounding tornado.
The eye of a tornado is the calm, relatively clear center of the storm, surrounded by a rotating wall of wind and clouds called the eyewall. It forms in the center of the tornado vortex as air descends from aloft. It is typically small, usually less than 2 miles in diameter.
In many cases the center of a tornado will be a calm area similar to the eye of a hurricane, albeit much smaller.
The eye of a tornado is a relatively calm area that can sometimes be found at the tornado's center, similar to the ey of a hurricane.
A tornado's center, or "eye," is actually found in hurricanes, not tornadoes. In a tornado, the most intense winds and destruction are located in the center of the funnel cloud. This is where the rotation is strongest and where the most damage is typically inflicted.
Yes. A tornado has a center of rotation.
A tornado has a center of low pressure.
The center of a tornado.
In most tornadoes the wind moves up in the center of a tornado. However, in others there is a downdraft that forms because the tornado is spinning so fast that winds from the outside cannot reach the center. This creates a calm area similar to the eye of a hurricane.
The "eye" of a tornado is at the center of the funnel.
The center of a tornado is an area of intense low pressure.
There is no real term for the tip of a tornado. A small area of intense suction in a tornado may be referred to as a suction spot.
No. The eye of a tornado is a calm, clear area at the tornado's center.
Pressure decreases sharply, reaching its lowest at the center of the tornado. This pulls air toward the center of the tornado and then drawn into the tornado's updraft. The tornado spins as it originates from a larger circulation called a mesocyclone.