Not on their own. It is not uncommon to find severe thunderstorms along a cold front. But other ingredients such as wind shear are needed for those storms to produce tornadoes. Additionally, not all tornadoes are associated with cold fronts. Tornadoes may also occur in association with a dry line, a warm front, or a hurricane.
It is very rare for snow to occur during a tornado. Tornadoes are associated with warm and moist conditions, whereas snow typically requires colder temperatures. However, in extremely rare cases where intense cold air meets warm, moist air, there is a very small chance for snow to occur during a tornado.
:( every state has a tornado. Alaska has even had a tornado
Antarctica is the only continent that has never had a typhoon or tornado. Its extremely cold climate and lack of significant landmass suitable for the formation of such weather events make it highly unlikely for them to occur there.
It is not fully understood about how exactly tornadoes form, grow and die. Tornado researchers are still trying to solve the tornado puzzle, but for every piece that seems to fit they often uncover new pieces that need to be studied. However, current knowledge indicates that a tornado usually dissipates when cold air undercuts the updraft of the tornado's parent thunderstorm. This causes the updraft to weaken until it can no longer support a tornado.
Not directly. When a cold air mass plows into a warm air mass it produces a cold front. Thunderstorms can form along cold fronts. Given a few other conditions these thunderstorms can produce tornadoes.
mostly cold fronts
it makes a tornado
Humans can not effect a tornado. Only nature can make a tornado occur. The cold and hot air curl together and form the tornado.
it makes a tornado
Tornadoes can be caused by either supercell thunderstorms or by the interaction of cold and warm fronts. Supercell thunderstorms are the most common cause of tornadoes, with their rotating updrafts creating the conditions necessary for tornado formation. When cold and warm fronts clash, the temperature difference and wind dynamics can create the instability needed for tornado development.
A tornado.
a tornados's is caused by hot and cold weather together
The largest tornado on record (the Hallam, Nebraska tornado of May 22, 2004) was produced by a supercell thunderstorm that most likely was associated with a cold front or dry line.
No. It is too cold in Antarctica for tornadoes.
Tornadoes cannot change the shape of the land.
It is very rare for snow to occur during a tornado. Tornadoes are associated with warm and moist conditions, whereas snow typically requires colder temperatures. However, in extremely rare cases where intense cold air meets warm, moist air, there is a very small chance for snow to occur during a tornado.
No. A hairdryer produces such a small amount of heat that it will not affect the weather. Nothing you can do could ever cause or prevent a tornado.