Before it reaches the ground, the precursor to a tornado is called a funnel cloud.
When a storm develops into a tornado, it is typically associated with a type of cloud called a supercell. Supercells are large, rotating thunderstorms that have the potential to spawn tornadoes due to the strong updrafts and wind shear within the storm.
This is a tornado, which is a violent windstorm characterized by a twisting, funnel-shaped cloud extending toward the ground. Tornadoes can cause significant damage and are capable of producing winds exceeding 200 mph.
The process of tornado formation starts when rolling air called wind shear gets taken into the updraft of a thunderstorm. This turns the storm into a supercell, a storm with a strong, rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. Under the right conditions a downdraft can descend from the back of the storm, wrap around the mesocyclone, and force it into a tighter more intense vortex: the tornado itself.
The answer to this question is precaution!
The process you are referring to is called condensation. When water vapor in the air cools and turns into liquid water droplets, it forms clouds. This is a critical step in the water cycle that leads to cloud formation and precipitation.
When a storm develops into a tornado, it is typically associated with a type of cloud called a supercell. Supercells are large, rotating thunderstorms that have the potential to spawn tornadoes due to the strong updrafts and wind shear within the storm.
A tornado is formed when wind shear turns a storm into a supercell, a kinds of long-lived thunderstorm with a rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. Under the right conditions a downdraft may descend from the back of the storm and wrap around the mesocyclone, turning it into a tornado.
The energy is stored in the air as thermal energy. A supercell thunderstorm turns that into kinetic energy in the form of rotating wind. Under the right conditions that rotation can form a tornado.
a snom storm is made when snowing turns really bad the wind picks up due to tornado activity == == DGA
This is a tornado, which is a violent windstorm characterized by a twisting, funnel-shaped cloud extending toward the ground. Tornadoes can cause significant damage and are capable of producing winds exceeding 200 mph.
* Dark, often greenish sky. Sometimes one or more of the clouds turns greenish (a phenomenon caused by hail) indicating a tornado may develop. * Wall cloud, an isolated lowering of the base of a thunderstorm. The wall cloud is particularly suspect if it is rotating. * Large hail. Tornadoes are spawned from powerful thunderstorms and the most powerful thunderstorms produce large hail. Tornadoes frequently emerge from near the hail-producing portion of the storm. * Cloud of debris. An approaching cloud of debris can mark the location of a tornado even if a funnel is not visible. * Funnel cloud. A visible rotating extension of the cloud base is a sign that a tornado may develop. * Roaring noise. The high winds of a tornado can cause a roar that is often compared with the sound of a freight train. * Tornadoes may occur near the trailing edge of a thunderstorm and be quite visible. It is not uncommon to see clear, sunlit skies behind a tornado. They may also be embedded in rain and not visible at all.
Tornadoes develop when wind shear (horizontally rolling air) is turned vertical by a thunderstorm and starts it rotating. This turns the thunderstorm into a supercell, a thunderstorm with a powerful, rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. If conditions are right, a downdraft called a rear-flank downdraft or RFD will descend from the storm and wrap around the mesocyclone, tightening and intensifying it and extending it down to the ground, producing a tornado. A funnel cloud has the general form of a tornado but is not in contact with the ground, while a tornado extends all the way from the clouds to the ground with winds capable of producing damage.
The process of tornado formation starts when rolling air called wind shear gets taken into the updraft of a thunderstorm. This turns the storm into a supercell, a storm with a strong, rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. Under the right conditions a downdraft can descend from the back of the storm, wrap around the mesocyclone, and force it into a tighter more intense vortex: the tornado itself.
The cloud starts turning clockwise then turns into a funnel
It turns into a cloud
it turns into a cloud
it dosent it just falls out of the cloud when the moisture gets to heavy, then the water evaporates and turns into a cloud again