Both are, but it is probably more likely with a tornado.
Of these, a tornado produces the fastest winds.
Hurricanes themselves are much larger than any thunderstorm or tornado.
Of these, tornadoes have the shortest duration.
Winter storm is another word for this group tornado hurricane blizzard and thunderstorm
earthquake
The fastest winds on earth occur in tornadoes. In extreme cases they can exceed 300 mph.
No, a hurricane is not a tornado over water. A tornado and a hurricane are quite different. A hurricane is a large-scale self-sustaining storm pressure system, typically hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is a small-scale vortex dependent on a parent thunderstorm rarely over a mile wide. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
For a hurricane: warm sea surface temperatures and little to no wind shear For a thunderstorm: convective instability and a lifting mechanism to start convection For a tornado: strong thunderstorms and strong winds shear.
a hurricane is like a tornado but on water while a thunderstorm is electricity built up in the clouds waiting to strike
It depends on the tornado. If it is a single vortex tornado the winds near at the edge of the core will be the fastest. However, many of the strongest tornadoes are multivortex, meaning that they have smaller vorticies (almost like mini tornadoes) inside the main vortex. In a multivortex tornado the fastest winds are within these subvortices.
No. In terms of wind speed a tornado is the strongest. In terms of energy released and earthquake is the strongest.
The thunderstorm might go down and turn into a tornado and then when it hits the ocean it might turn into a hurricane