Yes. There have been a few. In 1970, Tetsuya Fujita surveyed the damage left by the Lubbock, Texas tornado. He used the information gathered here to created the Fujita scale. In 1974 he analyzed footage from the 1974 Super Outbreak and proved the existence of multiple vortex tornadoes.
Ted Fujita was a pioneer in the study of tornadoes. He is most well-known for creating the Fujita scale, which rates the intensity of tornadoes ranging from F0 to F5.
No. Meteorology is the study of weather, which includes tornadoes along with many other phenomena.
Tornadoes are a natural phenomenon. They are the subject of scientific study.
Meteorologists (weather scientists) study tornadoes and how to predict them, but there are no real efforts to try to prevent them. That is impossible.
Yes. Doppler radar is one of the most important tools in the modern study of tornadoes.
Tornadoes fall under the study of meteorology, which is a branch of atmospheric science that focuses on understanding weather phenomena, including tornadoes. Meteorologists study the formation, behavior, and prediction of tornadoes to help improve early warning systems and protect communities from their impacts.
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severe weather expert
Because nearly all tornadoes are produced by supercells.
Yes. Tornadoes are a natural phenomenon and are thus a subject of scientific study.
Tornadoes are most famous for causing death and destruction.
wikipedia.com gives all famous types of tornadoes and tornado records