a tornado is formed by a thunderstorm
The visible funnel of a tornado is the result of moisture condensing inside the vortex. As the air in a tornado rises, it cools, which causes more moisture to condense, resulting in a funnel that is wider at the top.
A tornado does not have a spiral shape or appearance (except in some cases where helical subvortices form), but the winds in and near a tornado move in a spiral fashion.
It is impossible to make long term predictions for when and where a tornado will occur. At best, we will know about this next tornado a few minutes before it forms.
A tornado usually forms from a mesocyclone, which occurs in the updraft or rear portion of some thunderstorms.
A cone-shaped tornado is simple a tornado whose funnel is cone-shaped. Tornado funnels may also appear rope-like, column-like, or appear wispy. The shape and size of a tornado do not necessarily indicate how strong the tornado is.
A vortex that forms in water is called a whirlpool.
it is a bottle shape
A funnel shape
If you are asking whether a tornado can change its shape or appearance then yes. It is quite common for a tornado to change in shape, size, and intensity.
the noun that pronounce predicate. they used " e or ed"
A tornado is called a waterspout anywhere that it forms on water.
A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
A tornado's funnel cloud forms when warm, moist air rises rapidly and creates a rotating column of air. This spinning motion causes the air to condense into a funnel shape, which is visible as the iconic tornado funnel cloud.
tornado
No. It is the spinning air that forms a tornado.
The color is gray and the shape is that of a cone.
The visible funnel of a tornado is the result of moisture condensing inside the vortex. As the air in a tornado rises, it cools, which causes more moisture to condense, resulting in a funnel that is wider at the top.