Warm climates .
Stationary Front
A waterspout it a tornado that forms on a body of water. It looks like a land formed tornado but on a smaller scale.
Tornadoes do not affect climate. Climate is the long term trend in weather patterns while a tornado is a short lived effect. Temperature inside a tornado is lower than it is in the surrounding environment. However, you would only experience this while inside the tornado itself.
No. A tsunami and a tornado are two completely different things. A tsunami is a large wave or series of waves usually triggered by an underwater earthquake or landslide. A tornado is a violent vortex of air that forms during a thunderstorm. A tornado that forms on water is called a waterspout.
A tornado comes from a type of storm called a rotating thunderstorm, but is not a storm, itself.
The cloud that forms the visible part of a tornado is called a funnel cloud.
When a tornado forms it often produces a funnel cloud.
Fast air. Really, really fast air.
It is a tornado and a hurricane
Tornadoes are spawned by cumulonimbus clouds, which are multi-level clouds.
a tornado is formed by a thunderstorm
No one really know pressure can vary for the type or category of a tornado.
The climate of tornado alley is warm, humid air that usually travels from off the Gulf of Mexico.
Not exactly. A tornado itself is a violently rotating windstorm that usually creates a condensation funnel, but a tornado can develop without a funnel.
Tornadoes do not have any notable impact on climate.
The cloud formation before a tornado funnel forms is typically a rotating wall cloud. This type of cloud is often associated with severe thunderstorms and can indicate that a tornado may develop. It is important to take shelter if you see a rotating wall cloud, as it could produce a tornado.
No. A tornado is a small scale short-lived weather event . Climate is the overall average weather pattern in an area over the course of 30 years or more. So a tornado will not affect the climate of a region.