Trees can be largely torn apart by an F2 tornado but most buildings will remain standing. An F2 tornado will remove the roof from a typical frame house but leave most walls standing. Weak structures such as mobile homes, barns, and garages will likely be destroyed.
F2 is a rating on the Fujita scale, which assess tornado intensity based on damage. The scale runs from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest. F2 indicates a strong tornado (most tornadoes are F0 or F1) that can tear the roof from a well-built house and lift cars off the ground.
Tornadoes primarily destroy property through their extremely fast winds. In a strong tornado there winds are strong enough to tear many structures apart or push them over, and sometimes even lift them up. Objects picked up by the winds then become high speed projectiles that can damage what they hit. Weak tornadoes can also destroy structures by bringing trees down on them.
It destroys property in two ways. First of all, the intense winds of a tornado can damage or destroy most property. Secondly, it picks up objects like furniture and parts of buildings, turning them into high speed projectiles.
Winds in a tornado that are strong enough to tear off roofs from buildings can reach speeds up to 200-300 mph (320-480 km/h). This extreme wind speed, combined with the rotating nature of tornadoes, creates incredibly destructive forces that can cause significant damage to structures in their path.
They mostly damage property with their very powerful winds, which can tear pieces from buildings or even completely blow the buildings away. Tornadoes can also cause secondary damage by picking up objects and turning them into high-speed projectiles.
An F3 tornado will destroy most trees and leave most houses partially destroyed. An F5 tornado will completely destroy most structures, debark, trees, and send them airborne.
They destroy homes and trees and they also destoy homes to animals tear apart cars and do much more.
No, buildings do not explode due to low pressure in a tornado. The destructive force in a tornado comes from high-speed winds and flying debris, not pressure differentials. Buildings may collapse or sustain damage from the strong winds and debris impact.
The winds of a tornado are very vast. The force the winds carry can tear things apart or push them past their breaking point. The winds even in a "weak" tornado can also topple trees onto buildings. The winds in strong tornado can propel objects at high speeds, causing more damage than the wind alone. The stronger a tornado gets, the larger and heavier objects it can carry.
Tornadoes produce very strong winds that can tear structures apart. People are typically killed by flying debris or collapsing buildings.
A tornado moves air and objects from one place to another and can tear apart buildings and trees. However, in all of this the chemical composition of everything hit by the tornado remains the same. Therefore all changes in this case are physical.
Both tornadoes and hurricane have very powerful winds that can tear apart buildings and vegetation, and produce highly dangerous flying debris. Though flying debris in hurricanes is less of an issue.
Tornadoes have very powerful winds. In a strong enough tornado these winds exert an enormous amount of force on anything they strike, this can tear apart buildings or knock them over. Additionally, tornadoes can pummel buildings with debris carried by those winds, causing even more damage.
An EF2 tornado is considered the beginning of a strong or significant tornado. An EF2 tornado has estimated winds of 111-135 mph. These winds can tear roofs from well built houses, snap large trees, toss cars, and completely obliterate mobile homes. While tornadoes of this strength do not usually kill they are still very dangerous.
A tornado causes damage to property through strong winds that can uproot trees, rip off roofs, and collapse buildings. The debris carried by the tornado can also act as projectiles, further damaging structures in its path.
No. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not large enough for this to happen. Tornadoes tear houses apart with the power of their wind.
F2 is a rating on the Fujita scale, which assess tornado intensity based on damage. The scale runs from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest. F2 indicates a strong tornado (most tornadoes are F0 or F1) that can tear the roof from a well-built house and lift cars off the ground.