The typical temperature during a tornado can vary, depending on the temperature of the air inside the tornado. There have been temperatures recorded as low as 50 degrees and as high as 103 degrees.
The visible funnel of a tornado is the result of moist air being pulled into the vortex. The low pressure in the tornado causes a temperature drop, which in turn causes the moisture to condense. Temperature continues to drop as the air rises in the tornado, causing more moisture to condense at higher altitudes..
Before a tornado, temperatures can vary widely but are often warm and humid, typically ranging from the mid-60s to mid-80s Fahrenheit (about 18-30°C) due to the presence of unstable air. During a tornado, temperatures may drop suddenly as the storm system's cold air descends, often leading to a significant chill. After the tornado passes, temperatures might remain cool due to the storm's residual effects, but they can return to pre-tornado levels fairly quickly, depending on the surrounding weather conditions. Overall, the temperature changes are part of the dynamics of severe weather systems associated with tornadoes.
The bathroom is generally thought of the as the safest place to hide during a tornado because they normally don't have windows, and tornadoes can easily shatter the glass of them (and therefore cause injuries).
The air inside a tornado is cooler than its surroundings. This is not due to the wind or the fact that it comes from the sky, but from the fact that the pressure in a tornado is low. As air enters a tornado it is decompressed rapidly, and cools as a consequence. This is predicted by gas laws. In many cases the temperature inside a tornado is less than the dew point, which is why the funnel forms.
The funnel of a tornado consists of water droplets which condese as a result of a temperature drop inside the tornado that results from the low pressure. Temperature decreases with increasing heght, alowing more water vapor to condense.
tornado formation is not based on temperature, but upon storm structure. you cannot use temperature to determine tornados
The temperature during a tornado can vary, but it is typically around the same as the surrounding air temperature. Tornadoes can occur in a wide range of temperatures, as they are caused by specific atmospheric conditions rather than just temperature alone.
That is not known. Few measurements have been taken from inside a tornado and few if any of those included temperature.
The wind in a tornado spins accordingly to the temperature of the air
before a tornado it is usally calm after a strong tornado there is lots of debris and during a tornado there are things flying everywhere
Yes, temperature can rise in a tornado due to several factors. Intense friction between high-speed winds and the ground can generate heat, raising the temperature. Additionally, the high-energy air within the tornado can compress and warm up as it funnels into a more confined space, further increasing the temperature.
Most deaths during a tornado are caused by debris.
The safest place during a tornado is in a basement or similar underground shelter.
The safest place to be in your house during a tornado is in the basement.
Both. Most of the death and destruction occur during a tornado, but recovery from a particularly devastating tornado can take months or years.
Tornadoes don't form at an exact temperature, as they depend upon a wide variety of complex factors of which temperature is just one. It is highly unusual to see them in temperatures below 50 degrees Fahrenheit, though not unheard of, particularly at high elevations. Tornadoes form best when very warm, moist air is available. The most severe events have been preceded be temperatures in the mid 80s to the 90s.
The safest place to be during a tornado is in a basement or cellar.