Air in a tornado is rapidly drawn upward. This creates low pressure as more air rushes in to replace it. However this can ever completely fill the pressure deficit until the upward movement stops.
The lowest air pressure in a tornado is at its center.
The entire tornado is an area of low pressure, with the lowest pressure at the tornado's center.
No. It was once believed that the low pressure inside a tornado would cause houses to explode, but this notion was disproven by the 1990s. It is the wind and debris in a tornado that destroys houses, not the low pressure.
No. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not enough to cause buildings to explode. Tornadoes tear buildings apart with wind and debris.
Tornadoes are always part of a low pressure system and do not form in high pressure.
A tornado produces low pressure, but it is not a pressure system in and of itself.
It is a myth. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not large enough to cause significant damage. Buildings are torn apart by the powerful winds of a tornado.
A tornado has low pressure in it, but it is not considered a low pressure system as it is too small to be its own weather system. The low pressure in a tornado causes the surrounding air to rush into it.
No, low pressure in a tornado does not cause buildings to explode. That is a common myth.
There is no required pressure at which a tornado forms. Large scale low pressure systems play a role in tornado formation, but the low pressure is not a direct cause of tornadoes. On rare occasions, tornadoes can form with air mass thunderstorms that occur in the absence of a large-scale weather system. There is low pressure inside a tornado, but in this case the important part is not how low the pressure inside the tornado is, but how much lower the pressure is outside the tornado. The range of these pressure deficits is not known as very few measurements have been taken.
No. It was once believed that the low pressure inside a tornado would cause houses to explode, but this notion was disproven by the 1990s. It is the wind and debris in a tornado that destroys houses, not the low pressure.
Hkgh pressure and low pressure come toghether.
No. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not enough to cause buildings to explode. Tornadoes tear buildings apart with wind and debris.
Tornadoes are always part of a low pressure system and do not form in high pressure.
A tornado produces very low pressure.
A tornado has a center of low pressure.
Yes. The pressure at the center of a tornado is very low, though not a vacuum.
A tornado produces low pressure, but it is not a pressure system in and of itself.
It is a myth. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not large enough to cause significant damage. Buildings are torn apart by the powerful winds of a tornado.