There is no solidly set minimum wind speed for a tornado. The Enhanced Fujita scale starts an EF0 at 65 mph, but tornadoes have occurred with estimated winds lower than that. Tornadoes are defined by the amnner in which the air moves rather than the wind speed. A tornado is a rotating vortex of strong wind that onnects to both the ground and the cloud base.
There is no set wind speed to that qualifies as a tornado, though different scales have minimum estimates ranging from 40mph to 65 mph.
The whirling wind forms a tornado.
The strong wind in a tornado is the source of its destructive potential.
That varies. If you are close enough to be in the area of the tornado's inflow then the wind will blow almost directly towards the tornado, perhaps a little to the right of that direction. In that case the wind direction will depend on where the tornado is relative to you. If you are beyond the inflow area for the tornado, then nothing about the wind direction would indicate the approaching tornado.
The largest tornado ever recorded was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013. This tornado was 2.6 miles wide. Doppler radar measured a wind gust in the tornado at 296 mph, the second highest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado.
The issue is not the amount of wind, but how the wind moves. A tornado consists of a violently rotating column of air produced by a thunderstorm. As a general rule the winds must be strong enough to cause damage, but there is no hard and fast lower limit.
Yes, wind near a tornado spirals in towards the tornado.
There is no set wind speed to that qualifies as a tornado, though different scales have minimum estimates ranging from 40mph to 65 mph.
The actual maximum wind speed for a tornado is not known. The strongest wind ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph.
A tornado IS wind- very fast winds spinning in a circle.
A tornado is a vortex made of wind.
The wind of a tornado are in a much smaller area, usually under a mile wide. A hurricane is hundreds of miles wide.
The whirling wind forms a tornado.
The strong wind in a tornado is the source of its destructive potential.
Yes, in simplest terms a tornado is a vortex of very strong wind.
Erosion wind is Tornado
That varies. If you are close enough to be in the area of the tornado's inflow then the wind will blow almost directly towards the tornado, perhaps a little to the right of that direction. In that case the wind direction will depend on where the tornado is relative to you. If you are beyond the inflow area for the tornado, then nothing about the wind direction would indicate the approaching tornado.