A slow-moving tornado tornado might travel at 10 mph, but a vortex with 10 mph winds would by no means be considered a tornado. The winds must be strong enough to produce damage.
Anything up to 10 miles, zero if driven in circles.
No, tornadoes are formed by powerful rotating updrafts within severe thunderstorms, typically with wind speeds much greater than 10-20mph. Wind speeds of 10-20mph are not strong enough to create the necessary conditions for a tornado to form.
The duration of a tornado's existence can vary widely, from a few seconds to more than an hour. On average, tornadoes last around 10 minutes. However, some exceptionally long-lived tornadoes have been known to remain on the ground for over an hour.
Tornadoes can move at various speeds, typically between 10 and 60 miles per hour. However, some tornadoes have been recorded as moving faster, up to 70 miles per hour or more. The speed at which a tornado moves can depend on various factors, including the storm system it is associated with and the terrain it is crossing.
An F5 tornado typically lasts for over half an hour, and sometimes over an hour.
10 to 20 mph would be a slow moving tornado. A typical tornado travels at 30-35 mph.
There is no such thing as a category 5 tornado. Category 5 is a rating on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale. The highest rating for a tornado is EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale, which has estimated peak wind speeds of greater than 200 miles per hour. Winds may exceed 300 miles per hour. This is not the same as travel speed. The speed at which a tornado travels is unrelated to its rating. A typical tornado travels at about 30 miles per hour, but may be stationary or move faster than 70 miles per hour. A category 5 hurricane has sustained winds of at least 157 miles per hour. A typical hurricane travels at 10 to 25 miles per hour.
your stupid its 10 miles an hour
It depends. Some people mistakenly refer to the size of a tornado as its length, while width is a more appropriate term. No tornado has ever come close to 10 miles wide. However, in terms of. Path length, or the distance a tornado travels, a tornado can easily go for 10 miles or more. The most destructive tornadoes often have path lengths of 20 to 50 miles.
It depends on the speed. At 10 miles per hour 100 miles is 10 hours. At 100 miles an hour it is 1 hour. At 1000 miles an hour it is 0.1 hour (= 6 minutes).
Anything up to 10 miles, zero if driven in circles.
The Weather Channel has a system of assessing tornado probability. Tornado condition 1 means there is approximately a 10% or 1 in 10 chance of a tornado occurring within 50 miles.
The average tornado lasts about 10 minutes and travels about 5 miles.
10 Miles per Hour = 8.68976241900648 Knots
6/10 ( 36min) of an hour.
A tornado and a sandstorm are more different than alike. Both are results of moving air, but in a tornado, the air swirls around in a tight spiral. And wind speeds are very high - well over a hundred or even two hundred miles per hour. In a sandstorm, the rapidly moving air travels in the same direction across a broad front (carrying sand with it). Wind speeds in a sandstorm have a minimum of about 10 miles per hour (to begin picking up sand) and can reach 30 or 40 miles per hour or more.
10 miles per hour is approximately 16.1 km per hour.