you spin the bottle fast and stop
A tornado in a bottle is a simple science experiment that demonstrates the formation of a vortex, similar to that of a real tornado, using water and dish soap in a plastic bottle. By swirling the bottle in a circular motion, a mini-tornado is created inside the bottle due to the movement of the liquid. It is a fun and educational way to observe fluid dynamics and turbulence in action.
The eye of a tornado itself most likely does not do damage as radar analysis and eyewitness testimony show that they eye of a tornado is calm like the eye of a hurricane. The wind and debris surrounding the eye is what causes damage.
It is not known for certain, but a likely candidate was the tornado that hit Seneca, Kansas on May 27, 1896. At one point the tornado was 2.2 miles wide. The largest tornado ever recorded was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013, measured at one point to be 2.6 miles wide. This tornado was officially rated EF3 as it was over open country when it reached peak intensity and so caused relatively little damage at that point. Radar analysis, however, suggests that it may have reached EF5 intensity.
Only to a very limited degree. On the long term, analysis of large scale weather patterns can determine a period of a few hours in which tornadoes are likely to form in a region. However, this analysis cannot predict where or when individual tornadoes will strike. On the sorter term, radar analysis can determine if a tornado is likely to produce a tornado in the next few minutes, though it still cannot say when a tornado will form. If a tornado has already formed and we know its location, speed, and direction, we can gauge approximately when it will reach certain locations.
A satellite tornado is a tornado that touches down near and usually orbits a larger tornado within the same mesocyclone.
it is a bottle shape
It doesn't really. A tornado in a bottle provides amusement, but little else.
To make a tornado in a bottle with glitter, fill a clear plastic bottle halfway with water. Add glitter and a drop of dish soap for visibility. Twist the bottle to create a vortex, simulating a tornado.
A tornado in a bottle project uses liquid to simulate the vortex motion of a real tornado. Both involve rotating air masses creating a funnel shape. However, the scale and force of a real tornado are much stronger and destructive than what can be replicated in a bottle.
How does changing the speed at which the bottle is spun affect the size or duration of the tornado created inside it?
A tornado in a bottle is a simple science experiment that demonstrates the formation of a vortex, similar to that of a real tornado, using water and dish soap in a plastic bottle. By swirling the bottle in a circular motion, a mini-tornado is created inside the bottle due to the movement of the liquid. It is a fun and educational way to observe fluid dynamics and turbulence in action.
To make a tornado in a bottle, fill a 2-liter bottle with water, add a few drops of dish soap, and swirl the water to create a vortex. Optionally, you can paint the bottle with clouds and a landscape scene to make it into a "tornado in a bottle board" for educational purposes.
A tornado in a bottle is created to demonstrate the vortex motion of a tornado. It helps visualize the swirling motion and updrafts associated with tornadoes, without the destructive force or dangers of a real tornado.
Mainly scientists that study tornadoes or tornado watchers
If you mean a hurricane in a bottle then yes, a hurricane in a bottle and a tornado in a bottle are the same thing. In shape, however, the vortex bears more resemblance to a tornado than a hurricane.
When you flip the bottle you impart some circulation into the bottle. As water gets pulled in towards the hole at the bottom of the bottle this circulation speeds up through the conservation of angular momentum. The draining water and vortex enhance one another until it forms a "tornado."
by swirrling the bottle in circlesz causing a rotating funnel in the water