really fast
Tornado winds can reach speeds of up to 300 mph (480 km/h), making them one of the most destructive forces of nature. The highest wind speeds are typically found in the most intense tornadoes, known as EF5 tornadoes.
The speed of the winds in a tornado is called the tornado's wind speed. It is usually measured using the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, which categorizes tornadoes based on the estimated wind speed. The wind speed can vary greatly depending on the tornado's intensity, with stronger tornadoes having faster wind speeds.
Winds in tornadoes can reach speeds of over 300 mph (482 km/h), making them incredibly destructive and dangerous. The Enhanced Fujita Scale categorizes tornadoes based on their wind speeds, with EF5 tornadoes having the strongest winds.
Tornadoes owe their extremely fast winds in part to something called the conservation of angular momentum. If something that is rotation contracts in width then the spinning must speed up, such as with a spinning ice skater pulling in her arms. Tornadoes form when a larger but less intense mass of rotating air tightens and intensifies.
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.
The winds in tornadoes are fast, but tornadoes themselves do not necessarily move fast. Some tornadoes do move very fast. A few have traveled at over 70 mph. Meanwhile, others have crawled along at less than 10 mph, with some not moving at all. A typical tornado moves at 30 to 35 mph.
There is no evidence that there are tornadoes on Venus.
The most common question about tornadoes is likely "How fast can a tornado travel?"
No they spin very very fast
Take cover...and fast. Not sure about your question. Tornadoes will be tornadoes. As I said before take cover. I've always been taught to get into a closet. Or get into a bathtub with a mattress on top of you.
200-250mph hope this was a use to you.
They can kill just about anything. And they are extremely fast.
yes
The winds in tornadoes are extremely fast. The winds can push against and tear away at objects. Winds in tornadoes often carry flying debris that causes damage on impact.
Tornadoes cause damage through their extremely fast winds and through debris carried by those winds.
As with most areas, the majority of tornadoes in California are weak, with winds under 110 mph. However tornadoes as strong as F3 have been recorded, suggesting winds in excess of 135 mph.
A typhoon rotates cyclonically, just like tornadoes and hurricanes.