your animals.
Yes, everything can be sucked in to a black hole, even light
As the saying goes, it's not the fall that kills you; it's the landing. People who are picked up by tornadoes are likely to strike the ground with a signficant amount of force when they fall back down, often causing serious injury or death. In addtion a person caught in a tornado in any sort of structure is liket to be hit by flying debris. Most deaths in tornadoes are caused by debris, not from being picked up.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
it sucked up Mars and went deeper in
Things can be "sucked up" by a vacuum or other suction device, meaning they are pulled into the device due to the force of the airflow created by suction. This can include dust, dirt, debris, liquids, or gases.
The tornado sucked the car right up into the air. The vortex below those rapids sucked my canoe right out from under me!
Dorothy and Toto
depends on the strength of it. if your sheltered, you should be fine. but if your outside during a tornado it's possible. **The odds are good if you are caught without cover underground in a F3 tornado. You do not actually get sucked up but blown away in the strong wind. Reports say that the actual danger does not come from being carried away by the winds but having being hit by large flying stuff picked up also.
Air is continuously moving up in a tornado. This means that air surrounding the tornado must move in to replace the rising air.
The famous pair who were sucked up in their house by a tornado in their sleep are the characters Dorothy and Toto from the movie "The Wizard of Oz". In the movie, they were swept away to the magical land of Oz.
Most tornadoes don't pick up, kill , or injure anyone. When it does happen it is usually no more than a few people; most tornado deaths are from being hit o crushed by debris. Exact figure are difficult to determine as this is not the sort of thing of which extensive records are kept.
Air in and near a tornado spirals inward and upward very rapidly. The strong winds can pick up objects to carry with them.
Dorothy and Toto
A tornado has low pressure at its center and a powerful updraft. As a result air rapidly rushes inward and upward, sometimes carrying things with it.
Objects get sucked up into a tornado due to the low pressure at the center of the vortex, which creates a strong upward suction force. This force can lift and carry debris, dust, and even larger objects into the funnel cloud.
You don't go anywhere in particular. Anything that gets picked up by a tornado usually gets deposited somewhere later along its track. Lighter objects tend to travel farther.
People caught in a tornado can be tossed and carried along with the swirling winds, ending up anywhere within the storm's path. Typically, they can be found scattered over a wide area, depending on the tornado's strength and the distance it carries them.