A gale is along hard wind that can reach a high speed of at least 39 mph usually resulting from a mid-latitude cyclone, rather than a tornado which can reach high speeds but tends to travel in a circular motion in a small area. A tornado is defined as a violently rotating column of air and can produce stronger winds than a gale.
Gale tornado is a term used to describe a very strong tornado with wind speeds exceeding 200 mph. These tornadoes are capable of causing catastrophic damage and are often associated with severe weather events.
No. Twister is just an informal word for a tornado.
A gale is a low pressure system (a large, rotating storm system) that takes place outside the tropics and has winds of 39-54 mph. A gale tornado or F0 tornado, is the weakest category of tornado that breaks tree limbs, peals peels of shingles and takes down gutters. An F5 tornado is is the strongest category of tornado with winds that can exceed 300 mph. These tornadoes can tear houses clean off their foundations, destroy reinforced concrete structures, strip trees of their bark, and rip the asphalt from roads. In short, an F5 is far more powerful.
A strong tornado is one that is EF2 or stronger. A violent tornado is one that is EF4 or EF5.
There is none; twister and tornado are two words for the same thing. Tornado is the preferred scientific term.
A Tornado is swirly fast wind, a flood is rising water levels...
A tornado drill is like a fire drill but for tornadoes: practice for the possibility of a tornado. A tornado warning means that a tornado has been detected or is likely to form soon.
A tornado takes Dorothy Gale from Kansas to the land of Oz.
gale storm tornado
There is no technical difference between a tornado and a twister; they both refer to the same meteorological phenomenon of a rapidly rotating column of air in contact with the ground. "Tornado" is the more commonly used term in the United States, while "twister" is sometimes used as a colloquial or informal synonym.
a tornado, typhoon, cyclone, twister, and hurricane are pretty much the same.
cyclone. gale. storm. tornado. twister. blow. tempest. typhoon.