It varies widely. Some tornadoes travel less than a kilometer. A typical path might by 5 to 10 kilometers. Not very many tornadoes will travel more than 50 kilometers, however there are extreme cases. A handful of tornadoes have been recorded with paths over 300 kilometers long, with the record path length being 352 kilometers.
Tsunamis can travel at the speed of a jetliner in the open ocean about 800 km/h. In slightly deeper water so it is going slightly faster and catches up. ... In the deep ocean a tsunami can travel at more than 800 kilometres per hour close to the speed ... sometimes the fifth o? Regards Sathya
Debris in a tornado can reach speeds of over 200 mph (322 km/h), making it extremely dangerous and capable of causing significant damage. The speed of debris within a tornado can vary depending on the tornado's intensity and size.
Many tornadoes can range from travel, some barley a few feet or yards, some up to 20 miles or more, depending on the tornado. The longest distance a tornado has ever been known to travel was 219 miles.
It can range from stationary to over 70 mph. The average is about 30 mph.The fastest moving tornado ever recorded traveled at 73 mph. Most tornadoes travel at 30-40 mph. Some are nearly stationary.
The average tornado lasts 10-15 minutes. But duration may last anywhere from a few seconds to, in rare cases, over an hour. The longest lived tornado on record was on the ground for 3.5 hours.
12000km
Approximately 180,000,000
10000000000000000000000000000000000000000 km an hour....
1.5 hours with a stop
It varies. A typical tornado might travel about 5 kilometers. However, many tornadoes have path lengths of less than a kilometer. In rare cases a tornado may have a path lengths of 200 kilometers or more. The longest path ever recorded for a tornado was 352 kilometers.
25.9 kilometres.
The distancetravelledby the First Fleet was about 24 000 kilometres, or 15 000 miles.
no
It is still a concept so no one knows
No. They measure different things. Gallons measure liquids and kilometres measures distance. The only connection is measuring how many kilometres you can travel per gallon.
It depends on how fast the tornado is traveling. The average tornado moves at about 30 mph, so in 15 minutes an average tornado would move 7.5 miles. However, some tornadoes move much faster. The fastest moving tornado on record was found, at times, to travel at 73 mph. At that speed the tornado would travel just over 18 miles in 15 minutes.
A tornado typically travels 1 to 2 miles in its time on the ground. However some may travel just a fraction of a mile while a rare few travel more than 100 miles.