The funnel clouds of a tornado often range from white to gray to black.
No. Not necessarily.
Tornadoes are most closely associated with wall clouds and funnel clouds, both of which form from cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes form in cumulonimbus clouds, which can be considered a variety of nimbus.
Dark clouds. This is because dark colors take in/absorb more heat and sunlight than lighter colors.
Nope, of course not, you don't need to worry. It just means that some winy weather is coming to get you, yea you;) rotating clouds means there's a storm.
you will see Cumulonimbus clouds before a tornado which are large, dark, anvil-shaped clouds.
The clouds in tornadoes are called funnel clouds.
A tornado is formed from storm clouds. The funnel cloud is the tornado before it touches down.
No. While strange colors have been reported before or during a tornado, such phenomena are not directly linked with tornadoes, nor are they necessary for tornadoes to occur.
The only cloud you will actually find inside a tornado is the condensation funnel. Other clouds, such as the wall cloud and cumulonimbus are outside the tornado itself.
Cumulonimbus clouds can spawn a tornado.
They don't need to be any color in particular. Though they are often green. The clouds near a tornado and even the tornado itself may appear orange if it occurs near sunset. Clouds near a tornado can also be gray or black.
There is no set size for a wedge tornado. Generally a wedge tornado is one that appears to be wider than the distance from the clouds to the ground and the height of the clouds can vary.
Yes. A tornado can't form without a thunderstorm.
There is no single color associated with tornadoes. The sky will often have the typical gray of storm clouds. However, in some instances the clouds may appear black, green, yellow, or blue. Even when such cloud colors do occur, they do not necessarily indicate a tornado, just that the storm is intense.
you can get most colors
No. Not necessarily.