Depends on the size and strength of the Waterspout.
A water spout will be the color of the water it picks up.
No. A waterspout is a vortex of air, essentially a tornado on water. The low pressure in the waterspout causes the moiat air in it to cool, which causes water droplets to condense, forming a funnel cloud. A waterspout will also spray up some water from the surface, but not a very significant amount.
A tornado can pick up the water and scatter it around the landscape, but the water molecules themselves are still water. This is generally not a significant effect, though, as the water picked up rarely constitutes more than a fine spray. In some cases debris may be thrown into lakes and streams. Overall, tornadoes generally do not significantly affect water systems.
Yes. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
A waterspout is an intense columnar vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water and is connected to a cumuliform cloud. In other words, a tornado on water.
Wind can pick up water in the form of spray or mist when it blows over water bodies such as oceans, lakes, or rivers. The strength of the wind, the distance it travels over the water, and the size of the water droplets all affect how much water the wind can pick up.
A tornado on an ocean or any other body of water is called a waterspout.
There are two possible explanations. The first is that the water you felt was not spray, but rain, as watespouts are generally associated with showers and thunderstorms. Rain forms from condensed water vapor, and since salt does not evaporate with water, rain is always fresh water. If you actually entered the waterspout, you may have come in contect with the funnel. The funnel of a waterspout is not from water being suck up, but is the result of moisture condensing in the low pressure of the watespout. The same mechanism produces the funnel of a tornado on land.
there roots pick up much more water, that is why it's big
There are two ways in which waterspouts form. Some are ordinary tornadoes that just happen to be on water. These are called tornadic waterspouts See the related link below for an answer on that process, called tornadogenesis. But this type of waterspout is less common. The second type is called a fair weather waterspout as they are not typically associated with severe storms. These form when a body of water is warmer than the air above it. This causes convection, which forms clouds which, in turn, can further intensify the convection. If there is any twist to the air near the surface it can be taken up into this convection and intensify to form a vortex that connects with a cloud overhead to become a waterspout.
Weather Caught on Camera - 2011 Waterspout Wake-Up was released on: USA: 13 April 2011
Depends on capacity of tank but not much. It is heavier than gas and will go to bottom where pick up is